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Both VC investment and the number of VC deals remained subdued in Q3’24, as many VC investors globally remained in a holding pattern given the current uncertainties still permeating the market, including the continued lack of exit activity across all regions of the world.

Americas attracts largest share of VC funding in Q3’24

Global VC investment during Q3’24 remained relatively subdued, in keeping with recent trends. The Americas accounted for the largest proportion of VC funding globally, driven by a $1.5 billion raise by US-based Anduril Industries, a $1 billion raise by US-based Safe Superintelligence Inc, and a $900 million raise by Canada-based Clio. Asia attracted the second largest share of VC funding among the key regions, driven by a $788 million raise by Mynt, followed by a $688 million raise by Baichuan AI and a $415 million raise by ICLeague — both in China — in addition to a $362 million raise by Singapore-based Silicon Box, and a $360 million raise by India-based Zepto.

Europe also saw a relatively quiet quarter of VC investment in Q3’24, although a number of AI-focused firms raised solid $100 million+ funding rounds. The largest deals this quarter included Germany-based Helsing ($484 million) and France-based gaming company Voodoo ($386 million). Space-tech also received investor attention as highlighted by top deals by Isar Aerospace ($279 million) in Germany and D-Orbit ($166 million) in Italy.

Americas attracts largest share of VC funding in Q3’24

Global VC investment during Q3’24 remained relatively subdued, in keeping with recent trends. The Americas accounted for the largest proportion of VC funding globally, driven by a $1.5 billion raise by US-based Anduril Industries, a $1 billion raise by US-based Safe Superintelligence Inc, and a $900 million raise by Canada-based Clio. Asia attracted the second largest share of VC funding among the key regions, driven by a $788 million raise by Mynt, followed by a $688 million raise by Baichuan AI and a $415 million raise by ICLeague — both in China — in addition to a $362 million raise by Singapore-based Silicon Box, and a $360 million raise by India-based Zepto.

Europe also saw a relatively quiet quarter of VC investment in Q3’24, although a number of AI-focused firms raised solid $100 million+ funding rounds. The largest deals this quarter included Germany-based Helsing ($484 million) and France-based gaming company Voodoo ($386 million). Space-tech also received investor attention as highlighted by top deals by Isar Aerospace ($279 million) in Germany and D-Orbit ($166 million) in Italy.

2024 sees strong crop of new early-stage unicorns

At the end of Q3’24, the number of early-stage unicorn companies — companies with valuations over $1 billion — has already exceeded the number seen during all of 2023. This large uptick despite the current uncertain macroeconomic and geopolitical environment has been propelled almost entirely by activity in the AI space, with a number of early-stage AI companies obtaining unicorn valuations on their first major raises. While the number of new unicorns remained well below levels seen during the outlier years of2021 and 2022, it highlights the focus on the AI sector and how VC investors are pouring money into the space even as they take a far more cautious approach to their other investments.

Defense-tech reel in big deals in Q3’24

Defense-tech attracted a number of large raises in Q3’24, including US-based Anduril Industries — a developer of autonomous weapons systems — and Germany-based Helsing — a firm that uses AI to improve weapons capabilities and decision making. Ongoing geopolitical tensions and conflicts have likely driven interest in the defense-tech space. While VC investors have historically shied away from making investments in the sector, growing interest from governments in software and other non-hardware solutions related to defense has led some VC investors to view the space as a good investment opportunity.

Trends to watch for in Q4’24

While VC investment and exit activity will likely remain relatively soft in Q4’24, particularly until after the US presidential election in November, there is a growing sense optimism that exits activity could start to rebound in 2025. M&A activity could be first out the gate as VC investors look at deals in light of interest rate cuts in a number of jurisdictions.

AI is expected to remain a very hot area of investment, although there could be a shakeout as investors increasingly focus on companies able to show how they are using AI to generate real value. Regulation of AI activities will also be a major area to watch over the next several quarters, as governments and regulators increasingly prioritize the need to develop guardrails for AI activities, whether they are focused on safety, privacy, or appropriate use.

While alternative energy solutions have garnered strong interest from VC investors over the last two years — although total investment has fallen off over the last couple of quarters — interest could spike further over the next year given how global energy demand is skyrocketing and predicted to outpace supply.

sap-security-journey

I have some cautious optimism that 2025 could be a better year for the global IPO markets. After a very dry couple of years, IPO activity could finally see a resurgence. While we probably won’t see a lot of core AI companies going out yet—in part because many are still working to figure out the optimal business models, and are quite well funded—we could see companies in a wide range of other sectors looking to exit—including health and biotech, fintech, and energy and cleantech.

Conor Moore
Global Head, KPMG Private Enterprise
KPMG International

 
  • VC investment slows — falling back to $70.1 billion
  • Down and flat rounds continue — representing over 20% of deals
  • Median deal sizes edge upwards
  • Valuations for rebound for late-stage deals
  • M&A remains main exit route as IPOs stay on hold
  • Top 10 deals globally split among 6 countries

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Venture Pulse Q3'24

Global analysis of venture funding



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