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Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

Silicon Valley Investors Give Startups Survival Advice for Downturn (wsj.com) 45

After years of funneling cash into startups' grand ambitions, Silicon Valley's investors are engaging in the grim ritual of delivering survival advice to their portfolio companies. From a report: In recent online slide presentations, blog posts and social-media threads, venture-capital doyens including Lightspeed Venture Partners, Craft Ventures, Sequoia Capital and Y Combinator are telling the founders that they need to take emergency action for what could be the sharpest turn in more than a decade. Their advice includes cutting costs, preserving cash and jettisoning hopes that hedge funds or other investors will swoop in with big checks.

"The boom times of the last decade are unambiguously over," Lightspeed, which has backed companies including social network Snap and crypto exchange FTX, wrote in a dispatch for startup executives that was posted on Medium, a publishing platform, this month. The investors' admonitions are a departure from the growth-above-all mantra for startups in recent years, and come as the venture market is showing signs of sputtering. Funding for global startups -- at around $58 billion in commitments midway through the second quarter -- is on pace to drop by about one-fifth in the period compared with the previous quarter, according to analytics firm CB Insights. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index is down about 25% from its all-time high in November, and SoftBank Group, which has poured more than $100 billion into investments, this month reported a $26.2 billion loss in the first quarter as valuations plummeted in its portfolio of tech companies.

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Silicon Valley Investors Give Startups Survival Advice for Downturn

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  • My advice? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday May 30, 2022 @07:06PM (#62578264)
    Stop voting for right wing pro corporate politicians who put the onus for reducing inflation entirely on people who work for a living.

    There's two ways to reduce inflation. The first is to make more stuff. You can wait for the free market to do that but the free market it's kind of lazy and always wants to do the least amount of effort for the most amount of profit. That means it's prone to rent seeking like we're seeing with the housing market where corporations are buying up all the houses and renting them back out.

    What's the other way? Raise taxes on the rich, spend the money building cities and subsidizing education, see a large increase in productivity resulting in more goods and services, and down goes inflation. We did it in the 40s we did it in the '50s and we did it in the 60s and seventies. We even did it in the 80s due to a compromise between Ronald Reagan and the Democrats where he got all his military spending and they got their infrastructure spending.

    Then in the 90s we started electing pro corporate politicians like Clinton and Bush Jr and even Obama and God help us Trump. Not to mention people like Mitch mcconnell, Ted Cruz and Joe Manchin. So we stopped building things and we stopped making up for the deficiencies in the free market..

    We got away with it for a long time because we have 50 years of expansion and infrastructure spending. But those bills are coming due. Not that we didn't cause many a recession in the meantime but I think this one's going to be especially nasty.

    What you should be asking yourself is this, why is it every time inflation needs to go down it has to come out of my hide? We gave 3.5 trillion dollars to the top 1% during the pandemic and then we act like a few thousand to the bottom 99 caused out of control inflation. As an American don't you get tired of being on the hook for the out of control spending of the 1%? I know I do.
    • Re:My advice? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 30, 2022 @07:43PM (#62578322)

      Their advice includes cutting costs, preserving cash and jettisoning hopes that hedge funds or other investors will swoop in with big checks.

      If you have to be told this, then you have no place running a business.

    • Present this to any CEO of a struggling start-up and they'll stare at you awkwardly, even if they share your obvious political leanings. Nothing in your post helps a VC-funded firm stay afloat in the here-and-now. Nothing.

      You're just trying to shove your political screed down everyone's throats while pretending it has something to do with the topic at hand.

      • The CEO could stop voting Republican or for right-wing Democrats. In the short term the CEO gets tax cuts and low wage employees but in the long term they get gobbled up by mega corporations and forced to work a dead soulless job.

        Even the CEO of a struggling startup has an element of power to them that a fast food worker who can't get time off to vote just plain doesn't have. As things get worse because our ruling class is abandoning basic human decency in favor of Neo feudalism it's going to come down
        • And if he's a Democrat? Still doesn't save his company. Dumbass.

          Try staying on topic for once? Nobody gives a damn about your faux editorials.

        • Re:My advice? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by GoTeam ( 5042081 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2022 @08:45AM (#62579264)
          Why you think one political party is more responsible than the other is beyond me. Stop listening to what your politicians tell you and start paying attention to what they're doing. Stop listening to what the political parties tell you the other party is doing. Hold each politician responsible for what they say and how they vote. You make good points sometimes but it's getting lost in pointless political memes.
          Don't allow politicians to tell you "the other guy" is to blame. I don't accept that from employees or my children, so why should I let people with the authority to make real change do it either?
    • Re:My advice? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by notsouseful ( 6407080 ) on Monday May 30, 2022 @10:29PM (#62578532)
      There's a reason why I say the Democrats are the party of Business, and the Republicans are the party of Business Ownership. They are two very different things. One is about supporting the population and the American Dream, and the other is only about protecting their damn property. One party is about everybody's rights, and the other party is about "my rights". One party promotes and defends democracy across the globe, the other party wants to bury its head up Putin's ass. The difference couldn't be more distinguished.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      And now that you regurgitated the standard mainstream talking points, it's time for a harsh doze of reality.

      The main reason for inflation is demographics. Secondary reason is rolling back of globalization. Neither can be affected by local politics at this point. Funniest part in the whole thing is that having the significant wealth inequality actually makes systems weather this crisis better. Let me explain.

      First one is pretty straight forward. Consider how value is generated in the economy over average lif

    • Raising taxes does curb inflation, but it also causes producers to invest less; when there's less money to be made, the investments won't be made. Want to produce more goods and services without investors? That's the path of the downward spiral to government control of the economy, the thing that killed hundreds of millions of people in places like China, Cambodia, and the Soviet Union in the 20th century.

      We did it in the 40s we did it in the '50s and we did it in the 60s and seventies.

      The global reality in the decades after WWII is very different than it is now. Anything would have wor

    • by GlennC ( 96879 )

      I refer you to my signature line.

    • Lets hope nobody in politics takes an advice like that. First of all increasing taxes decreases legitimate business activity, but it does have an interesting side effect of creating entire industries, who work on getting around the taxes. So instead of worrying about business, people worry about their taxes.

      Secondly, it doesn't matter one bit by how much you increase the taxes, inflation is a monetary phenomena, it is mostly caused by governments getting into business of money printing and once they have

  • Paywalled; how does it compare to the YC "leaked" letter to post-series-A, pre-product-market-fit startups?

    https://techcrunch.com/2022/05... [techcrunch.com]

    • For the paywall challenged.

      https://archive.ph/sgOms [archive.ph]

  • Cash is gonna get real hard to find real fast. But that's just my guess
    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday May 30, 2022 @07:41PM (#62578314)

      Divide by 4 and you'll be much closer to the mark.

      • Yup. If there is hyperbole and panic when the Fed raises rates from very very low to very low in anticipation of achieving low, then it was past time to raise rates.

        • Yup. If there is hyperbole and panic when the Fed raises rates from very very low to very low in anticipation of achieving low, then it was past time to raise rates.

          You can't squeeze blood from a stone. 5% inflation is just a 5% tax hike, only it's a harder one to avoid. Most people are already on the brink of bankruptcy of have already gone that route (the large corps weren't buying up properties without sellers.) At some point people just stop trying and switch to barter, and while that level differs for every person, it is something that has a compounding effect built in: as more people opt-out entirely there's less labor on the market and more strain on industri

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Really sorry to hear. Oh well.

  • VCs are idiots (Score:4, Informative)

    by Nihil_75 ( 6766330 ) on Monday May 30, 2022 @09:26PM (#62578442)
    Look at the portfolio of these VCs - note-taking apps, crypto ponzi schemes, NFT douchbeggery... Once a decade they strike gold betting on a Unicorn like Stripe, but they are called unicorns for a reason... These are just money-bros talking out of their arse
  • You mean techies are gonna have to learn how to run a business in an environment where everything isn't handed to them on a silver platter?

    What ever will they do? However will they survive in the real world, outside of the life they've grown accustomed to?

    Oh, the horrors!

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