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Fewer Venture Capital Players Predict More Fundraising As Investor Caution Rises – Survey

There's more caution in the venture capital sector globally than there has been, the PitchBook report says. Among the details, Europe is garnering more attention.
A survey of 32 venture capital investors from around the world by
PitchBook, the
private market research and analysis firm, finds that 38 per cent
of them expect VC funding to rise over the next year, falling
from 58 per cent taking that view in the second half of 2024.
The figures suggest that economic turmoil associated with US
tariffs and geopolitical stresses have taken their toll.
Data from Pitchbook’s H1 VC Tech Survey shows
that 43.3 per cent of respondents said their VC firms are located
in Europe; 36.7 per cent said US, 10 per cent said China; 3.3 per
cent said the Middle East and Africa; 3.3 per cent said Oceana,
and 3.3 per cent said Latin America.
“After years of momentum driven by the post-Covid boom, the
industry is returning to caution. Capital is less abundant: now
with fewer exits on the horizon investors are looking to back
companies that can go the distance and are wary of fast growth
disjointed from any sustainable value,” Tom Henriksson, general
partner at OpenOcean, an early-stage venture firm, said.
Source: Pitchbook H1 VC Tech Survey.
Despite 84 per cent of investors bracing for at least mild
disruption from recent trade tariffs, the sector is not folding –
it is recalibrating, PitchBook said. Some 53 per cent of
investors are still actively hunting for deals even as
limited partners grow more risk averse, and a shift toward
domestic “tech sovereignty” is underway.
The data comes at a time when investment houses continue to
regale wealth managers, private banks, family offices and other
players about the benefits of VC, private equity, private credit,
forms of real estate and infrastructure. (See an
example here
from Hamilton Lane.)
The PitchBook report said fintech leads the way in VC activity –
with some of the AI hype translating into real-world action;
healthcare and enterprise technology are vigorous; transport and
logistics are more “stable” in behavior, the report
said.
"Looking ahead, 60 per cent of respondents combined still plan to
raise another fund within two years, but a growing contingent is
pushing timelines to three-to-five years or opting out
altogether, hinting at a consolidating market," the report
said.
"Regionally, Europe leads as the most attractive destination outside of the US, drawing investment from 48 per cent of respondents. Taken together, the data suggests an industry that remains active and opportunity seeking, but with sharpened caution, a shift in timelines, and a growing emphasis on defensibility and discipline," the report said.
Tariff effect
The report said that 84 per cent of survey respondents expect at
least a mild to moderate impact from the US tariff announcements;
64 per cent expect higher supply chain costs; and 50 per cent
predict slowing growth. The manufacturing and
semiconductor/hardware segments were deemed the most vulnerable
to tariff disruption.
Artificial intelligence
Respondents said the top blocker to AI adoption is a lack of
clear use cases – the cause cited by 45 per cent of
respondents – followed by workforce skill gaps and high
implementation costs. The number of respondents with regulatory
concerns around AI eased from 55 per cent to 39 per cent, and
bullishness on generative AI stabilized, with 44 per cent of
respondents more upbeat and 45 per cent reporting no change in
sentiment.