The Portion Of US VC Funding That Went To Female Founders Hit A New Peak In 2023, Thanks To Massive AI Deals

In 2023, the proportion of U.S. venture funding that went to startups with at least one female co-founder reached a new peak. In fact, a quarter of all funding — $34.7 billion — was invested in companies with at least one female founder, Crunchbase data shows.

The uptick in the portion of startup investment going to female-founded companies — up from 15% in 2022 — was in large part due to a number of billion-dollar-plus rounds raised by AI companies with a female co-founder. READ MORE

In 2024, many Y Combinator startups only want tiny seed rounds — but there’s a catch

When Bowery Capital general partner Loren Straub started talking to a startup from the latest Y Combinator accelerator batch a few months ago, she thought it was strange that the company didn’t have a lead investor for the round it was raising. Even stranger, the founders didn’t seem to be looking for one.

She thought it was an anomaly until she talked to about nine other startups, Straub told TechCrunch. They were all looking to raise nearly identical rounds: $1.5 million to $2 million with around a $15 million post-money valuation, while giving up only 10% of their companies — aside from YC’s standard deal, where it takes a 7% stake. Most had raised the majority of that already from multiple angels with only a few hundred thousand dollars’ worth of shares left to sell. READ MORE

Eleventh Circuit Invalidates Contest Providing Venture-Capital Funding for Black Women

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that a contest providing venture-capital funding only to Black female applicants is substantially likely to violate section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which prohibits race discrimination in the making of contracts. The 2-1 split decision in American Alliance for Equal Rights v. Fearless Fund Management, LLC (No. 23-13138, June 3, 2024) held that an organization devoted to “ending racial classifications and racial preferences in America” was substantially likely to prevail on its § 1981 claim to enjoin the restricted contest, and it remanded the case for entry of a preliminary injunction. READ MORE

13% of VC firms aren’t planning to raise another fund

Thirteen percent of venture GPs don’t plan to raise another fund as the LP pullback spoils fundraising efforts, according to PitchBook’s semiannual VC Tech Survey. That’s double the rate in H1 2023, when 6% said they had no plans to raise another fund.

Nearly half of venture firms—44% of those surveyed in mid-2023—had previously pushed back their plans to re-enter the fundraising process, as institutional investors became increasingly concerned with overexposure to the asset class. READ MORE

How to get a job in private equity

Private equity is a vast industry covering a range of investment firms from global companies like Blackstone, KKR, and The Carlyle Group to hundreds of smaller players that specialize by geography or sector such as Vitruvian Partners, Sovereign Capital Partners, or Bridgepoint Group. The biggest firms tend to operate beyond just private equity and invest in asset classes like real estate and private credit as well.  READ MORE

Will Europe Ever Match The U.S. For Startup Investment And Growth?

“Europe is less hard-working, less ambitious, more regulated, and more risk-averse than the US, with the gap between the two continents only getting wider.” Those were the words of Nicolai Tangen, the boss of Norway’s $1.6tn Norges Bank Investment Management (The Petroleum fund), in an interview with the Financial Times in April. As one of the largest single investors in the world, with increasing holdings in the US compared to Europe, Tangen’s views matter. But is he right, and what does it mean for Europe’s startups? READ MORE

VC funds take a shine to new gen’s D2C brands

Several direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands in sectors such as food and beverages, apparel, health and wellness — founded by scions of families running traditional businesses in similar categories — are drawing

These entrepreneurs with their inherent understanding of the business and deep-rooted connections in the supply chain ecosystems are best placed to launch modern avatars of legacy businesses, according to investors backing them. READ MORE

VCs are selling shares of hot AI companies like Anthropic and xAI to small investors in a wild SPV market

VCs are clamoring to invest in hot AI companies, and willing to pay exorbitant share prices for coveted spots on their cap tables. Even so, most aren’t able to get into such deals at all. Yet small, unknown investors, including family offices and high-net-worth individuals, have found their own way to get shares of the hottest private startups like Anthropic, Groq, OpenAI, Perplexity, and Elon Musk’s X.ai (the maker of Grok). READ MORE

Why Are Exits A Perennial Problem For VCs?

Venture capital firms (VCs) suffer with exits more than private equity (PE). Traditional wisdom suggests that they invest earlier in the life cycle and have to wait longer for the exit. Is this the real reason?

The past two years have been challenging for distributions for both VCs and PEs, especially the former hitting a 14-year low of 5% in distributions as a percentage of net asset value. Average distributions to paid-in capital (DPI) for VC funds launched in 2018 stand at a meager 0.3 times for both EU and U.S. managers, while DPI for funds launched in 2013 is at 1.1 times and 1.8 times, respectively. READ MORE

Main Risks And Opportunities For Venture Investors

Emerging markets provide numerous options for venture investors seeking development and variety. These countries have a large population of young, middle-class customers, propelling their marketplaces to grow faster than developed ones.

My experience as an investor has shown that the choice of investment focus depends on the geographic market. The LATAM, MENA (the Middle East and North Africa) and SEA (Southeast Asia) regions seem to be the most attractive. There, projects can receive an additional boost factor due to the market’s rapid growth. READ MORE

Private equity and mismanagement: Here’s what really killed Red Lobster

There are lots of stories you can tell about why Red Lobster declared bankruptcy this week. You can point to the impact of the COVID pandemic, which put a dent in the full-service dining market that Red Lobster never recovered from. (According to its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster’s guest count is down 30% from 2019.) You can cite the impact of inflation and higher wages for restaurant workers, which has raised the cost of dining out and made cheaper fast-casual restaurants more appealing to consumers. And you can enumerate the chain’s marketing missteps, including its introduction of the now-infamous Ultimate Endless Shrimp for $20 promotion in May 2023, which cost Red Lobster $11 million in losses in less than a year. But the biggest reason Red Lobster went under is pretty simple: Its owners sank it.  READ MORE

The Goldilocks Scenario Every VC Is Hoping For

Over the past few years, we’ve witnessed the meteoric top of the venture and startup markets where valuations were through the roof, investors were competing with each other on speed (instead of due diligence), founders were exclusively focused on raising the next round, and startups had an almost unlimited source of capital to pursue growth at all costs.

Those days ended with a series of significant blows to the ecosystem including the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, global wars and rising interest rates. READ MORE

The VC reset lets ‘quality deals’ shine

Raising venture capital has never been a given, but economic factors in the 2010s led to a historic flood of startup investment that gushed forward throughout the last decade. Now, the tides have turned. The return of interest rate hikes has sobered the VC community. 

That’s a positive thing, according to Nasir Qadree, founder and managing partner of DC-based Zeal Capital. “I think the market needed a reset,” he said, “to understand quality deals.” READ MORE

The Power of the 118-Hour Decision

Here’s how people think great things happen in Silicon Valley: A bright-eyed startup founder sketches a groundbreaking idea on a napkin. The napkin is picked up by a savvy venture capitalist. The VC glances at the sketch, gets excited, and wires millions of dollars to the young entrepreneur. And a unicorn—that is, a company that will reach the $1 billion level in value—is born.

This narrative of high stakes, fast decisions, and a risky gamble is alluringly cinematic. It's also a myth. And for anyone who wants to be a successful founder or investor, it’s a dangerous one. READ MORE