The Scotsman

Investors give cold shoulder to Scots start-up ventures

● Value of Scottish start-up funding falls to lowest first quarter total since 1998

- @Refinitiv By SCOTT REID sreid@scotsman.com

Scottish start-ups have recorded their lowest first quarter for fundraisin­g in more than two decades as the onset of the coronaviru­s crisis dented investor confidence.

Companies north of the Border raised just £2.1 million of venture capital during the first three months of 2020 with five rounds completed. The largest funding deal was for Edinburgh-based biotech outfit Mialgae, which raised £1.1m.

The £2.1m total was down from the £6.3m raised in the first quarter of 2019, from four deals, according to new research from Refinitiv.

Deal volumes and value were also substantia­lly down from the closing three months of 2019, which saw £36.2m of venture capital raised from ten deals.

The Scottish picture contrasts sharply with the UK as a whole, where companies raised the highest amount of any first quarter on record with £2.1 billion from 137 rounds.

Cornelia Andersson, head of mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&A) and capital raising at Refinitiv, said: “It’s been a torrid first quarter for enterprise in Scotland as coronaviru­s continues to take its toll on start-up investment as we’ve alreadysee­nwithgloba­lm&a.

“Despite the easing of lockdown, we expect investment to continue to fall into Q2 and beyond as the economy and business environmen­t slowly begins to recover.

“With huge expected demand for products and services to cope in this new normal, it wouldn’t be surprising to see investors pivot more towards ‘Covid-proof’ start-ups that enable remote working or connectivi­ty and pharmaceut­icals.”

According to the study, the most active investor in Scotland during the first quarter was Scottish Enterprise Glasgow, which invested £258,400 in two deals.

Across Europe, venture capital activity totalled £4.3bn invested across 294 rounds during the first three months of 2020. While this marked a 24 per cent fall in values and a 29 per cent decline in volumes from the same period last year, it remained the second strongest opening quarter on record from a value perspectiv­e.

Volumes, on the other hand, continued their downward trend and this represente­d the least active first quarter since 2009.

Funds located within the borders of Europe invested £2.4bn into domestic start-ups in the first quarter, accounting for 62 per cent of total disclosed investment.

Funds located within the United States contribute­d a total of £1.2bn, or 30 per cent, up from a 29 per cent share throughout the entirety of 2019. Asia-based investors saw their share drop from 8 per cent to 5 per cent with £212.1m contribute­d.

European venture-backed exits totalled £9.4bn across 35 transactio­ns in the first three months, according to Refinitiv, formerly the financial and risk business of Thomson Reuters, and one of the largest providers of financial markets data and infrastruc­ture.

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