2014年5月27日 星期二

London leads steep rise in VC investment

There was a massive rise in venture capital investment in the UK and Ireland in Q1, says Ascendant, the technology-focused investment house.


Q1 venture capital in Q1 in UK and Ireland was £538 million, says Ascendant, compared to £287 million in Q1 2013.


“This extraordinary level of investment has not been experienced in the UK and Ireland since Q1 2001 – just after the peak of the market in November 2000,” says Ascendant managing director Stuart McKnight.


The £538 million was invested by 108 investors across 85 deals worth over £500,000 compared to 59 deals by 82 investors in Q1 2013.


“As much as it is great news that the market is booming, it should be noted that nearly all the growth was from investors backing London based digital media businesses,” says McKnight, “with few exceptions the rest of the market and the country missed out in this growth.


“So are we in a bubble?” asks McKnight, “there are signs that support such a thesis – runaway growth in transaction volumes, proliferation of incubators/accelerators, booming private investment, increasing number of VC professionals investing for their own account, many sub-sectors becoming cluttered with me-too competitors – I could go on. However we do not think that the market is overheated – at least not yet.”


Ascendant tracks a number of indicators to help identify areas of interest. One of these is levels of syndication.


In normal conditions, around 65% of UK/Irish tech investments are syndicated (i.e. have more than one investor). When syndication starts to drop below this it is usually an indicator of malaise – investors being overconfident, greedy or hasty and doing more deals on their own or being unable to find another investor to join them in the transaction.


Before the last crash syndication levels dropped briefly to just under 50%.


“In Q1 syndication sat at 61% which is not something we would worry about too much but we will be watching this closely for the rest of the year,” says McKnight, “secondly the key fundamentals are very different from 2000. The UK Government has put into place a number of tax based investment support schemes which have attracted private investors to the tech market. We believe and are told by the folks in Horse Guards Road that these will be with us for a good long while.”


“Thirdly,” continues McKnight, “the structure of the UK market has improved over the last 5 years. There is support of deals at all sizes and stages of development. For example in Q1, 50% of all deals were less than £3m compared to just £1.5m in Q1 2013. This supports the view that money is available to good companies as they grow and need to finance expansion. So we may well be in a golden period right now but we will continue to watch for overheating.”


The Q1 stats show that the value of investments is up 87%. Nearly all of this has come from a boom in internet/wireless services investing up from £51m to £340m. 51 digital media/services business were funded in Q1 vs 16 in Q1 2013.


So investors are not just financing a greater number of businesses but also committing more capital to them. Ascendant can identify no particular subsector getting more attention than others – fintech, fashtech, edtech, eattech, etc all collected investors’ money. Not surprisingly the vast majority of these businesses are based in London which experienced a huge inflow of capital in Q1 – £395m – equal 73% of all funds invested in the UK and Ireland. All other regions were static at best or more commonly down on last year.


“Fund raising outside of the M25 can be a challenging business,” says McKnight.


The strong growth of Q4 in 2013 was surpassed in Q1 and investment levels are the highest seen for 13/14 years. Ascendant sees no particular reason for this to drop off in the near or medium term.


There are more investors participating in the market, at both the private and institutional ends, which suggests a very good year for companies seeking investment.


“Given the usual seasonal investment patterns, our best guess for 2014 is that around 300 companies will receive £1.5 billion,” says McKnight, “it is too early to say what the run rate is for Q2 but there have been some notable transactions already. So let’s hope that the good pace of activity is maintained.”


The busiest Q1 investors were Balderton, MMC, Accel, Albion Ventures, Business Growth Fund, Episode 1, Frog Capital, Index and Passion Capital


61% of deals involved more than one investor


50% of deals involved investment of less than £3m


Private investors participated in 27% of VC deals, US investors in 9%, Euro investors in 5% and Corporate Investors in 13%.


The 10 biggest deals received 57% of funds invested, included: Borro (£67m), mPowa (£45m), Tradeshift (£45m), Intelligent Energy (£39m), eCommera (£25m), WorldRemit (£24m), AMCS (£19m), Hailo (£16m), Zopa (£15m) and Shazam (£12m)


There were three primary areas of investment focus –Internet/Wireless Services (£340m), Software (£83m) and Cleantech (£79m).


51 Internet/Wireless Services companies received VC backing. The largest Internet/Wireless Services deals were: Borro (£67m), mPowal (£45m), Tradeshift (£45m), WorldRemit (£35m), Zopa (£15m), FTBpro (£11m) and Brandtone (£11m).


In the Software sector, 16 companies received investment. eCommera (£25m), Shazam (£12m), Nexmo (£11m) and Bizzby (£6m) received the biggest VC cheques.


Just 8 Cleantech companies raised capital with the biggest deals being: Intelligent Energy (£39m), AMCS (£19m), 3Sun (£9m), Iceotope (£6m) and Bowman Power (£3m)


London completely dominated all other regions taking 74% of the value and 65% of the volume of tech investment


All other regions failed to reach even 10% of value or volume






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