The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Silicon Valley braces for tech pullback after a decade of tremendous growth

- By Gerrit De Vynck and Rachel Lerman

After a decade of exuberance, Silicon Valley startups, venture capitalist­s and establishe­d tech companies alike are cutting investment and firing workers, prompting some in the tech world to openly predict a U.S. recession is on the way.

Facebook and Amazon have slowed their frantic hiring paces, while high-flying newer companies including scooter company Bird and email client Superhuman have laid off workers. Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk recently told employees he has a “super bad feeling” about the economy, and venture capital firm Lightspeed Venture Partners warned in a blog post “the boom times of the last decade are unambiguou­sly over.”

On June 9, fashion tech company Stitch Fix said it was cutting about 15% of salaried positions, oratotal of 330 roles, sending its stock price sinking. The people losing their jobs were told that morning, Chief Executive Elizabeth Spaulding wrote in a memo to employees.

“In light of our recent business momentum and an uncertain macroecono­mic environmen­t, we’ve taken a renewed look at our business and what is required to build our future,” Spaulding wrote.

The broader industry slump worsened June 10, when the techheavy Nasdaq index fell 3.5%. It is now down 28% for the year.

The sudden shift is giving many in the sector whiplash. Uncertaint­y has settled over Silicon Valley as venture capitalist­s, tech founders and regular employees debate whether the pessimism is overblown or if tech really is the canary in the coal mine, already suggesting a broader downturn in the U.S. economy.

Tech startups do serve as a “leading indicator” for the economy, said Till von Wachter, a professor of economics at UCLA. Higher interest rates can mean it’s more difficult

to raise money to fund new ventures, which typically take a while to turn a profit.

“They are one of the sectors that are the most sensitive to interest rate changes,” von Wachter said. “They are very dependent on what we believe the future to be.”

Tech has benefited immensely from the roaring bull market of the past decade, with soaring valuations enriching not just owners and investors but hundreds of thousands of employees who were paid in stock on top of their regular salaries. The pension plans and 401(k)s of millions of Americans have benefited from companies like Apple, Amazon, Google and Microsoft breaking through the trillion-dollar mark and becoming as valuable as the annual output of entire economies such as Italy or Brazil.

Year after year of rising valuations has created a pervasive feeling there is nowhere to go but up. An entire generation of tech workers and founders have never worked in an industry without long lists of open jobs, new projects getting approved easily and employers throwing a stream of perks such as free meals and unlimited vacation at them.

Money has poured into smaller tech companies, too, as investors, including traditiona­l venture capitalist­s all the way up to government-run sovereign wealth funds, have looked for ways to get in on the tech boom that never seemed to end.

Tech has faced shaky moments in the recent past. At the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic, millions of Americans lost their jobs, and tech stocks, along with the rest of the market, fell quickly. But it bounced back almost immediatel­y, and many grew even stronger during the pandemic as government spending boosted the economy and people spent more of their money on e-commerce and digital services.

To some prominent tech luminaries, this moment feels different.

“We do not believe that this is going to be another steep correction followed by an equally swift V-shaped recovery like we saw at the outset of the pandemic,” the leaders of blue-chip Silicon Valley venture capital firm Sequoia Capital wrote in a May presentati­on to its portfolio companies that was published by tech news organizati­on the Informatio­n. “We expect the market downturn to impact consumer behavior, labor markets, supply chains and more.”

That follows early warning signs, including pandemic darlings feeling the squeeze: Exercise company Peloton’s shares slumped and celebrity video app Cameo laid off staff. Amazon also said it had overextend­ed its warehouse space, and Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi warned of tougher times to come. Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Tesla and Google have all lost at least 20% of their market value since the beginning of the year.

Even Twitter, which is in talks to be bought by Musk, has been pulled below the price he’s willing to pay by a market that’s pessimisti­c about whether the deal will go through, as well as the company’s business prospects.

A fresh wave of economic uncertaint­y has washed over the world as Russia’s war against Ukraine grinds on, China’s economy wobbles because of fresh pandemic restrictio­ns and the U.S. Federal Reserve raises interest rates to try to tame inflation. That uncertaint­y hit Silicon Valley early, with share prices beginning a steep decline in January.

The lack of investor confidence has quickly moved down to startups, too.

For years, investors had been pouring money into startups in the hope they could go public and net a big return, but that path doesn’t seem as reliably profitable anymore. Venture capitalist­s whose money is tied up in not-yet-profitable tech companies are telling them to cut their spending and prepare to hold on longer without as much money.

Those companies, in turn, are starting to react to the market downturn with layoffs and hiring freezes.

And many companies are paying extra close attention to costs. Bird, the electric scooter and bike company, said it had to let go of about 23% of employees as it cut costs.

“While the need for and access to micro-electric vehicle transporta­tion has never been greater, macro economic trends impacting everyone have resulted in an accelerati­on of our path to profitabil­ity,” Chief Communicat­ions Officer Rebecca Hahn said in a statement.

Global venture capital funding fell to $39 billion in May, its lowest level since November 2020, according to Crunchbase, which noted that later-stage rounds were more heavily hit than early-stage startup funding.

“We’re just seeing a lot more caution from investors because of what’s happened in the public markets,” said Gené Teare, senior data editor for Crunchbase News.

Seattle-based investor Greg Gottesman said he and other investors are advising companies to be careful, but he noted many tech startups still succeed during economic downturns.

“There is more of a focus on growing smartly,” said Gottesman, managing director of Pioneer Square Labs. “Putting the right amount of people in the right spots and trying to grow smartly as opposed to just aggressive­ly.”

The broader economic concerns are real, but cutting investment and spending across the board may create new issues, said Antoine Nivard, co-founder and general partner at Blank Ventures. Many startups sell software to other tech companies, making them especially vulnerable when the industry in general slows its pace of spending.

“There’s also a self-fulfilling prophecy there. The first demand that evaporates is startups selling to each other,” Nivard said. “I wish there was a bit less panic and bit more thinking about the nuance.”

Whether the slowdown means a broader recession is coming to other industries is still an open question. Not everyone sees tech as a bellwether for the whole economy. Instead, the tech industry may have further to fall than other sectors simply because it received more funding, pumping up valuations to levels that the companies didn’t deserve.

“People are going back and realizing, ‘Maybe we shouldn’t have been pricing at amounts we were doing,’” said Jake Hare, founder of startup incubator Launchpeer.

A pullback in investment in startups is an example of the kind of thing the Federal Reserve is trying to trigger as it works to cool off the economy and lower inflation, said James Wilcox, an economics professor at the University of California at Berkeley. That doesn’t mean a recession.

“That party is over,” Wilcox said. “It’s not necessaril­y that there’s going to be a terrible hangover from it.”

 ?? ARIC CRABB/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS ?? The pension plans and 401(k)s of millions of Americans have benefited from companies like Apple, Amazon, Google and Microsoft breaking through the trillion-dollar mark.
ARIC CRABB/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS The pension plans and 401(k)s of millions of Americans have benefited from companies like Apple, Amazon, Google and Microsoft breaking through the trillion-dollar mark.
 ?? TONY AVELAR/AP 2021 ?? Facebook-parent Meta and Amazon have slowed their frantic hiring paces, while Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk recently told employees he has a “super bad feeling” about the economy.
TONY AVELAR/AP 2021 Facebook-parent Meta and Amazon have slowed their frantic hiring paces, while Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk recently told employees he has a “super bad feeling” about the economy.

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