The venture capital market appears to be gaining momentum heading into the back half of the year. As we wrote in our 2024 outlook, we believe 2023 was best categorized by a general “slowness” as valuations, deployment, fundraising, and exits all reverted to historical levels.
In contrast, we have seen signs of a recovery in the first half of 2024. The shifts we’re witnessing are gradual, and there are plenty of difficulties to traverse along the way, but we believe we’re navigating a healthier environment for venture capital overall — one where innovative companies are being rewarded for making long-term, prudent decisions.
While our crystal ball may be as blurry as anyone else’s, we believe eight emerging trends will continue as the year progresses:
1. Capital efficiency surge: Following a decade marked by historically low interest rates, which reached their bottom in recent years, there is a growing emphasis on capital efficiency. This shift will likely result in a number of high-valued start-ups, or “unicorns,” particularly those that secured substantial funding in 2021, struggling to justify past valuations. With investors more judicious about financing, many of these companies may have to accept significant down rounds. Going forward, we believe that far more companies will adapt and build their businesses based on a foundation of better capital efficiency.
2. LPs will likely prioritize DPI: The venture capital landscape has seen liquidity challenges for some fund managers, causing allocators (limited partners) to be more selective with their investments. That is because, despite a decade of robust activity, including a very favorable liquidity environment in 2020 and 2021, most venture fund managers have returned very little capital to their investors subsequently (Figure 1). Over the past year we have seen interest move from Total Value to Paid-In (TVPI) to Distributed to Paid-In (DPI), and we expect this trend to continue as allocators favor managers who have returned capital.