The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Seed funding slows in Silicon Valley

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SAN FRANCISCO: The bloom is off seed funding, the business of providing money to brandnew startups, as investors take a more measured approach to financing emerging US technology companies.

Seed-stage financing has been sliding for the last two years, with the number of transactio­ns down about 40 per cent since the peak in mid-2015, data show.

Dollar investment­s in fledgling companies have also declined, although less dramatical­ly, dropping more than 24 per cent over the same period.

The slowdown comes despite an explosion of interest by wealthy individual­s and foreign investors looking to park money in the next big thing.

And it has potentiall­y big implicatio­ns for Silicon Valley.

Early-stage funding is the life blood of a technology ecosystem built on risk-taking.

Denied critical resources in infancy, companies can’t hope to scale quickly enough to unseat incumbent industries and grow into the next Uber Technologi­es Inc or Airbnb.

“The reason why startups are disrupting companies in the 21st Century is not because they are smarter.

“It’s because they have capital to do so,” said Steve Blank, a serial entreprene­ur, startup mentor and adjunct professor at Stanford University.

Early-stage investors, known in Silicon Valley vernacular as seed and angel investors, often act as farm teams do in sports.

They provide the first significan­t money and mentoring to help entreprene­urs prove their technology and hit milestones needed to attract even bigger investment­s from venture capitalist­s later on.

But the zeal that prevailed just two years ago has faded. Seed and angel investors completed about 900 deals in the second quarter, down from roughly 1,100 deals in the second quarter of 2016 and close to 1,500 deals during that time period in 2015, according to a report released last month by Seattle-based PitchBook Inc, which supplies venture capital data.

The dollar amount provided by seed and angel investors was US$1.65 billion in the second quarter. That’s just shy of the US$1.75 billion for the same time period of 2016 and down significan­tly from 2015, which saw US$2.19 billion invested into fledgling startups.

Veteran seed investors and industry analysts offer a number of reasons for the decline.

They cite concerns over inflated valuations as well as a tepid market for initial public offerings, which provide seed funders a way to recoup their investment­s.

After some much-hyped IPOs such as GoPro Inc, LendingClu­b Corp and Fitbit Inc lost their sizzle, Wall Street has curbed its appetite for shares in unproven private companies with billiondol­lar-plus valuations.

Others blame the rise of technology leviathans for the decline in seed funding deals.

San Francisco seed fund Initialize­d Capital, for example, has slowed its investment pace to about 20 companies a year, down from 50 to 60 just a few years ago, even though its fund size more than tripled to US$125 million, according to managing partner Garry Tan. — Reuters

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