Updated

Venture investment fell 8.5 percent during the first three months of 2008 compared to the final quarter of 2007, according to the new MoneyTree Report from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association. The report is a big, comprehensive study that reinforces what everyone already kind-of knew, or at least suspected. It tracked a total of 922 venture deals worth $7.1 billion — in terms of dollars, that’s an 8.5 percent drop.

In a conference call discussing the report, NVCA Vice President John Taylor emphasized that investment tends to be cyclical, and that the first quarter of the year tends to have less investment than the second or the fourth. But Q1 2008 was also down from the $7.5 billion in venture money invested during the same period last year.


Nina Saberi, a partner at Castile Ventures, said one of the most significant factors that will continue to hurt venture investment is the decreasing number of IPOs — according to the NVCA, there were only five IPOs during the first quarter of 2008. The acquisition market is weakening too, Saberi said, which is putting downward pressure on valuations. All of this means venture firms need to support startups for a longer period of time before their exits, and that firms therefore need to be more careful with how they invest.

First-time deals also fell 18 percent to $1.6 billion invested in 294 companies. Those deals accounted for 23 percent of all venture dollars during this period.

“We see from an early stage investing point of view, the economic slowdown has had an impact and perhaps people are being mindful of the economic slowdown,” Saberi said. “But, at the same time, the effects of it are milder than you might imagine from listening to the evening news.”

The report also breaks the deals down by industry. Biotech received the most money, with $1.27 billion going to 126 deals, but software had the most deals, with $1.26 billion in 234 financings.

Update: Dow Jones VentureSource has broken down Q1 investment by region (see screenshot, left). Not surprisingly, the San Francisco Bay Area saw the most money invested, with $2.56 billion in 213 deals. Southern California came in second, with $672 million in 63 deals.

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  1. April 18th, 2008
    10:06 pm

    Is The Venture Capital Party Over? said:

    [...] (via Venture Beat) [...]

  2. Snaptalent Blog » Overall venture funding goes down - industry pundits panic. Let them said:

    [...] been seeing mass hysteria hit the press about the slowdown in venture funding linked to how people are being cautious about investing in new startups. In my opinion there are [...]

  3. April 20th, 2008
    12:16 pm
  4. April 21st, 2008
    10:35 am

    It’s official: Venture investment declined in Q1 « Blog of Intellectual Capital said:

    [...] To read more on the MoneyTree report, go to VentureBeat´s excellent article here. [...]

  5. May 21st, 2008
    11:40 am

    VC investment in China increases by 46 percent » VentureBeat said:

    [...] kind of growth is particularly impressive when you recall that in the United States, venture investment actually dropped by more than 5 percent, year-over-year, due largely to the economic downtown and the weak market for IPOs and [...]

  6. June 20th, 2008
    5:21 pm

    The Venture Capital Decline « Venture Capitalism said:

    [...] industry has shown signs that the decline in venture capital firms will continue.  Venture Beat reports that in the first quarter of 2008 venture investment fell [...]

4 Comments

  1. April 18th, 2008
    10:14 pm

    Allan said:

    I’d be interested in finding out how this is affecting startup funds or first-time venture funds.

  2. April 19th, 2008
    10:37 am

    Nat said:

    Maybe it reach the peak on social media website but not in bio-technology and maybe green energy yet.

    Nat
    http://www.workersinc.com

  3. Mike said:

    The LifeScience section of VentureBeat used to provide the excel spreadsheets that PWC and the NVCA passed out to the press. Any chance we can see the data? Thanks.

  4. April 21st, 2008
    10:20 am

    Anthony Ha said:

    Mike — I’ll see what I can do.

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