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Early-stage companies and disruptive technologies are attracting investors, while late-stage growth investments present more challenges
Recent market conditions have proven challenging to private companies seeking capital. A combination of valuation resets, cost structure reassessments and more stringent structural terms demanded by investors have made it difficult to secure financing. Many investors shifted their focus to portfolio company management during this time vs. capital deployment into new opportunities, said panelist Stephen Lambrix, EY Private Transactions Advisory Leader in Financial Accounting Advisory Services.
When investors have decided to back new management teams, companies in the seed to Series A stages and companies with disruptive technologies have been most appealing, Lambrix said, adding, late-stage growth deals “are tough in this environment where your return profile hinges on the exit opportunity via IPO, M&A or otherwise. Earlier is easier.” Growth rounds are getting done in this environment but far less than early-stage companies.
It’s also clear that companies with compelling unit economics that can demonstrate a path to profitability have a leg up in this financing environment. “Focusing on unit economics is fundamental to building a good business,” said panelist Nicole Quinn, a partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners. “Building a generational business is the approach and the mindset a founder needs to have.”
Climate tech and biotech are two industries generating interest. But the hottest industry right now is generative artificial intelligence (AI). An economic downturn is often fertile ground for emerging industries and businesses, as it provides founders an opportunity to aggressively prepare for the needs of the market and the growth they expect to achieve, Quinn said.
“We’re going through a significant technological wave, just as we did with disruptive technology like the internet and mobile,” she said. “We’re excited to see what these AI companies can do.”
Quinn believes there are a lot of good companies that have filed their S-1 forms and are ready to do an IPO. While many were hopeful IPOs would pick up again this spring, that hasn’t happened. Macroeconomic factors like inflation and high interest rates still need to improve before we can expect to see the IPO markets return. As a result, M&A activity has been limited as well.
“It's never been more expensive to acquire a customer, competition is fierce and we’re going into a recession,” Quinn said. “So, a lot of these bigger companies, they need to stabilize their own ship. When they have done that, then I think they will look to make acquisitions. But I also think they’re not in a hurry until the IPO window opens up.”