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Businesses The Almighty Buck

38% of VCs Disappeared From Dealmaking in 2023 36

Marina Temkin, writing at PitchBook: Boston-based OpenView stunned the VC world with news in early December that it laid off most of its employees and would stop all new investments months after raising its $570 million seventh fund. The 17-year-old firm, which managed $2.4 billion, was too prominent to keep its closure under wraps. But OpenView was far from the only investor that stopped backing startups this year.

The number of active investors in US VC, which we defined as making two or more deals, plummeted by 38% in the first three quarters of 2023 compared to the same period last year, according to PitchBook data. That translates to 2,725 fewer firms making deals. The decline in active investors is far higher than the 28% decrease in deal count during the period, the Q3 2023 PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor shows. The data indicates that investors are not merely writing fewer checks. Some dealmakers may have run out of funds and could be deemed zombie funds. Others, such as crossover investors, may have stopped allocating to the VC asset class.
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38% of VCs Disappeared From Dealmaking in 2023

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  • Um... duh (Score:1, Informative)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
    we cranked interest rates. That's what it's designed to do. Powell was very clear he wanted to "cool the economy", which is fed speak for layoffs and fewer jobs [youtube.com].

    It didn't do anything for inflation, since that was just profiteering, but it did cost a bunch of people their jobs and a bunch of us who still have jobs aren't getting raises or bonuses this year.
    • Do you have a finance advice and education blog? I'd love to visit. You have really interesting ideas about the economy.

      • No, but Liz Warren & Katie Porter are both good folk to keep an eye on with regards to finance. Also the YouTube channel "Some More News". It's a comedy news show on YouTube, but the only way you can really get any useful alternative opinions out there usually is to either get into Congress or do comedy.
      • Indeed he does. You can read all about it here: https://www.econlib.org/librar... [econlib.org]

    • and Powell did say explicitly he wanted layoffs (https://www.forbes.com/sites/jackkelly/2022/08/27/fed-chair-jerome-powell-says-fighting-inflation-will-cause-job-losses-heres-what-you-need-to-do-now/ and https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/26... [cnn.com]). And the idea was just to get the uppity plebes from actually wanting compensation for their work.
      • Re: Um... duh (Score:5, Informative)

        by Malc ( 1751 ) on Thursday December 21, 2023 @11:22AM (#64096157)

        Neither of those articles says he wants there to be layoffs. He acknowledges that there might be layoffs, and is perhaps willing for that to happen, but he's not explicitly targeting that. What he *wants* to do is reduce inflation to 2%. Reducing inflation can be as simple as raising borrowing costs so people donâ(TM)t have so much disposable income. Itâ(TM)s a spectrum though and a difficult bouncing act, and he acknowledges that.

        • s/bouncing/balancing/g

        • The only way you reduce inflation is to reduce the money supply and thus demand. If people don't have jobs, they don't have money.
          • If peopleâ(TM)s and companyâ(TM)s debt servicing goes up, they have less money to spend elsewhere. This includes, for example, mortgage rates going up. Increased debt costs also reduces how much people/companies borrow to spend elsewhere. So while youâ(TM)re right, job losses are not the only way to reduce spending. Even the fear of job losses reduces spending. Iâ(TM)m sure the Fed though would prefer a softer landing without mass job losses, even if itâ(TM)s just because it

      • by whitroth ( 9367 )

        Oddly enough, we're at the LOWEST unemployment rate.

        • Alas, both parties have cooked unemployment rates since the 80s. Of course, it's possible that we are at a low unemployment rate because people are working under the table, are living on benefits, retired, living with relatives. I'm guessing it's working under the table.
    • Inflation is down. [usinflatio...ulator.com] Jobless rates are at historic lows. [cnn.com] The only jobs and businesses that seem to have been hurt are bullshit jobs at scam startups and the financial infrastructure that undergirded them.

  • ... It would seem to imply that their assorted strategies for choosing businesses is flawed. It doesn't have to be perfect, because it's a scattergun approach and only a percentage need to succeed to yield profit. But they're self-evidently under that percentage.

  • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Thursday December 21, 2023 @09:08AM (#64095807)

    Obviously too many idiots have too much money when they can throw piles of it at stupid business plans just because they have the latest buzzword in their name.

    Current wealth distribution is not healthy in the West, and the only system we have is permanently set to 'concentrate it further'.

  • Good.

    The whole startup model is poisonous anyway: management is poor, workers are abused and using investor funds to allow the company to wipe out the competition through artificially low prices (before jacking them up later) is anti-competitive.
  • VCs find no new USA start-ups to support ? Mebby gutting USA retail manufacture ... from clothing to houseware to electronics ... was a really really bad idea. Adam Smith made it very clear; only raw materials were to be imported and manufactured goods exported. But the Feds pay farmers to export USA food products ( ignore oil and cotton ) , while importing Chi.com knife/fork/spoon kind of retail. Pimping parasite investors and their foreign wage-slave labor. Applying ROMAN JUSTICE t
    • It's a labor cost issue. The US has advanced industrialized farming plus very poorly enforced regulations around immigrant labor. So food is cheap to produce here. But Russia still beats us on wheat export, and India beats us on rice export.

      For manufacturing. Asia, especially China, Invested big time in production of synthetic textiles like polyester. They ended up with a production capacity way above what the US could manage and by the 1980's it was cheaper to setup sewing machines in a warehouse in China

    • >>Adam Smith made it very clear; only raw materials were to be imported and manufactured goods exported.

      And if every country followed that advice then no one would sell you raw materials and no one would buy your manufactured goods. Even for a giant country with lots of resources, it's difficult to have a completely self-sufficient economy (just ask the Soviet Union). Also, that is definitely NOT what Adam Smith wrote. Time to re-read Wealth of Nations.

      • Producers buy and sell raw materials. Always. Everywhere. Did Soviets try and fail in self-sufficiency ? Pls read ROADSIDE PICNIC for the inside story of what Soviet development looked like. And Adam Smith said just what I repeated from WON. Quisling Boscos are an entirely different deal ... and a good street-flogging would do wonders for their attitude. Lenin had that much ( but no more ) very right. You cannot reason with wealthy parasitic sociopaths or savages. Gawd ha

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