ReportWire

Tag: The Exchange

  • With liquidity rare, VCs may get creative to return investor cash | TechCrunch

    With liquidity rare, VCs may get creative to return investor cash | TechCrunch

    Welcome to the very last issue of The Exchange! With TechCrunch+ sunsetting this month, The Exchange column and its newsletter are also coming to an end. Thank you for reading, emailing, tweeting, and hanging out with us for so many years.

    P.S. A special thanks from myself to Anna, who was nothing short of a brilliant lead author for this newsletter since taking it over. She deserves endless credit for her work on the email.

    Today on The Exchange, we’re digging into continuation funds, counting down through some of our favorite historical Exchange entries, and discussing what we’re excited to report on for the rest of the year! — Alex

    Continuation funds

    Continuation seemed like an apt theme from our perspective. It is also a very topical one: “The greatest source of liquidity now is going to be continuation funds,” VC Roger Ehrenberg predicted in a recent episode of the 20VC podcast.

    In case you aren’t familiar with the term, let’s turn to the FT for a definition:

    Continuation funds, which are common in private equity [PE] but rare in venture capital, are a secondary investment vehicle that allows them to “reset the clock” for several years on some assets in old funds by selling them to a new vehicle that they also control. This helps a VC fund’s backers, known as “limited partners,” to roll over their investment or exit.

    If you have been following the last few months of venture capital activity, the “why now?” is easy to answer. As the StepStone Ventures team told our colleague Becca Szkutak in her December 2023 investor survey: “With portfolios awash in unrealized value, fewer immediate exit opportunities, and longer hold periods on the horizon, GPs are beginning to get creative in order to generate liquidity.”

    In practice, a continuation fund sees new investors invest in existing portfolios, but “it reflects today’s valuations,” Ehrenberg said. This repricing and the potential conflict of interest around it sound challenging in theory, but Ehrenberg doesn’t think so. “You have net new investors looking at a portfolio, so they’re the price setter, not the existing manager.”

    It’s not just very large funds like Insight Partners and Lightspeed that can explore this option, either. “It’s a viable strategy for a decent swath of the venture industry,” Ehrenberg told 20VC host Harry Stebbings.

    Whether it’s continuation funds, strip sales or secondaries, there’s a clear impetus for VC to look for solutions to its often ill-timed cycles, as we had already seen with the rise of permanent capital and publicly listed funds. A common thread in today’s economy is that projects and companies aren’t given the time they need to fully succeed, so even if it supposes a temporary discount, it’s good to hear that net investors are prepared to give portfolios more time to shine.

    RIP The Exchange

    The Exchange began its life in late 2019, before it even had a name. It quickly became a daily column during the week, and later this weekend newsletter. For those of you interested in the historical quirks of building media products, The Exchange was a TechCrunch+ product on the site, but its weekend issue was sent out for free as an email. Why was that the case? Because at the time we didn’t have the internal tech to send out subscriber-only emails!

    Over the life of The Exchange on TechCrunch+ we shipped more than 1,000 columns and newsletters, making it the largest and — if we may — most impactful single project for driving subscribers to what was our paid product. The Exchange and TC+ were inseparable, so it makes sense that they are being retired together. Still, as with any project that mixed both work and personal passion, we’ll miss it.

    From its start, the $100 million ARR club and the early pandemic days replete with stock market collapses and fear, The Exchange was around to chronicle the 2020–2022 startup boom, and its later conclusion. We went from tallying monster rounds and a blizzard of IPOs to watching venture capital dry up and startup exits become rarer than gold. It’s been wild.

    Anna took over The Exchange’s newsletter in early 2022, around the time that Alex became editor-in-chief of TechCrunch+. The columns continued to be a group project, but we had to divide and conquer to keep our output at full tilt.

    Below is a list of some of our favorite Exchange entries. Of course, we couldn’t go back through the entire archive — which you can find here — so consider this a partial download of the hits:

    • The $100M ARR Club (December 2019). The start of a long-running series looking into pre-IPO startups. A bunch of the entrants like Monday.com later went public.
    • Why is everyone making OKR software? (January 2020). Our first “startup cluster” style post, digging into what we found to be an unusually busy segment of upstart tech company effort.
    • API startups are so hot right now (May 2020). API startups would stay hot for years to come, leaning on the model that Twilio helped pioneer. It’s interesting to think back to May of 2020, when there was still ample fear in the market. Little did we know what was coming next.
    • Don’t hate on low-code and no-code (May 2020). The low, no-code debates have quieted somewhat as the method of creating software that non-developers manipulate and bend to their own will has become more table stakes than controversial product choice. Still, it wasn’t always that way.
    • Startups have never had it so good (July 2021). By mid-2021, it was clear that the market for startup shares was in a new era, with investors piling cash into every software company that moved.
    • How to make the math work for today’s sky-high startup valuations (July 2021). Underpinning the massive funding boom that we noted before was an expectation that software growth was going to be faster, and last longer than previously expected. That wound up not being true.
    • What could stop the startup boom? (September 2021). We were a little concerned in later 2021 that the pace of investment was not entirely sustainable. The market would stay hot for a while longer, but our notes about potential disruptors to the startup boom wound up being reasonably accurate. Interest rates really did change the game.
    • More LP transparency is overdue (January 2022). VCs will tell you what they invest in but are often more tight-lipped about their own backers. We argued that startup founders are due a bit more information on where their capital is ultimately coming from.
    • Why you shouldn’t ignore Europe’s deep tech boom (February 2022). One interesting narrative forming in recent quarters is Europe’s venture and startup resilience during the present slowdown in private-market capital investment. We said that European deep tech was poised to do well. And, well, we were right.
    • Yes, it’s become harder for startups to raise funding (July 2022). By mid-2022, it was clear that the boom times were over, despite 2021’s exuberance stretching into early 2022.
    • The rise of platform engineering, an opportunity for startups (December 2022). Instead of investing in more developers, why not spend to help them be more productive? Later cuts to developer payrolls made it clear that the era of mass-hiring was behind us, making the thesis here all the more pertinent.
    • The mirage of dry powder (January 2023). After a lackluster end to 2022, the optimistic take was that VCs had lots of dry powder — capital to put to work — that they were sitting on. Surely those funds would shake loose and bring back the good times? Anna argued that some of the venture capital theoretically sitting on the sidelines was less “real” than it looked.
    • A core plank of the SaaS economic model is under extreme pressure (August 2023). One way that software companies grow is by selling more of their service to customers over time. However, by last August it was clear that net retention was suffering, meaning that a lot of organic growth that startups might have once counted on was evaporating.
    • Will the power of data in the Al era leave startups at a disadvantage? (August 2023). If AI is data brought to life, then do the companies with the most data win the day? And if so, where does that leave startups?
    • Rainbow or storm? (September 2023). After discussing improving fintech results, Anna dug into the use of AI to fight fraud. It was an interesting turnabout of the usual AI and fraud narrative, which involves AI bolstering fraudulent activity instead of limiting it.
    • Klarna’s financial glow-up is my favorite story in tech right now (November 2023). After seeing its valuation slashed, Klarna didn’t slow down and instead kept growing and improving its financial performance. Alex gave them a big thumbs-up for progress made.
    • WeWork’s bankruptcy is proof that its core business never actually worked (November 2023). What more can we say about WeWork other than that it was a weird leasing arbitrage play that never had a very good core business.
    • Why I’m modestly crypto-bullish in 2024 (January 2024). Ahead of spot bitcoin ETFs, this column indicated that this year could be a fecund one for crypto as a whole. So far, so correct.
    • Yes, the tech layoff surge you are feeling is real (January 2024). And to close out some of our favorite, or most memorable entries, the recent layoff wave has been anything but a mirage. Sadly.

    We’re not done

    While The Exchange is shuttering, we still have big plans for coverage this year. Thankfully we’re both still at TechCrunch, so you are far from rid of us. Alex wants to work on unicorn health, the state of debt financing in 2024, and how AI will find purchase at the OS layer. Anna is curious about AI hubs beyond San Francisco, GP stakes investing and whichever S-1 we can get our hands on.

    Thanks again for reading The Exchange’s post and newsletter. We’re so very grateful to have gotten to spend so much time with you on this project. Onward and upward!

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • Safety by design | TechCrunch

    Safety by design | TechCrunch


    W
    elcome to the TechCrunch Exchange, a weekly startups-and-markets newsletter. It’s inspired by the daily TechCrunch+ column where it gets its name. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here.

    Tech’s ability to reinvent the wheel has its downsides: It can mean ignoring blatant truths that others have already learned. But the good news is that new founders are sometimes figuring it out for themselves faster than their predecessors. — Anna

    AI, trust and safety

    This year is an Olympic year, a leap year . . . and also the election year. But before you accuse me of U.S. defaultism, I’m not only thinking of the Biden vs. Trump sequel: More than 60 countries are holding national elections, not to mention the EU Parliament’s.

    Which way each of these votes swings could have an impact on tech companies; different parties tend to have different takes on AI regulation, for instance. But before elections even take place, tech will also have a role to play to guarantee their integrity.

    Election integrity likely wasn’t on Mark Zuckerberg’s mind when he created Facebook, and perhaps not even when he bought WhatsApp. But 20 and 10 years later, respectively, trust and safety is now a responsibility that Meta and other tech giants can’t escape, whether they like it or not. This means working toward preventing disinformation, fraud, hate speech, CSAM (child sexual abuse material), self-harm and more.

    However, AI will likely make the task more difficult, and not just because of deepfakes or from empowering larger numbers of bad actors. Says Lotan Levkowitz, a general partner at Grove Ventures:

    All these trust and safety platforms have this hash-sharing database, so I can upload there what is a bad thing, share with all my communities, and everybody is going to stop it together; but today, I can train the model to try to avoid it. So even the more classic trust and safety work, because of Gen AI, is getting tougher and tougher because the algorithm can help bypass all these things.

    From afterthought to the forefront

    Although online forums had already learned a thing or two on content moderation, there was no social network playbook for Facebook to follow when it was born, so it is somewhat understandable that it would need a while to rise to the task. But it is disheartening to learn from internal Meta documents that as far back as 2017, there was still internal reluctance at adopting measures that could better protect children.

    Zuckerberg was one of the five social media tech CEOs who recently appeared at a U.S. Senate hearing on children’s online safety. Testifying was not a first by far for Meta, but that Discord was included is also worth noting; while it has branched out beyond its gaming roots, it is a reminder that trust and safety threats can occur in many online places. This means that a social gaming app, for instance, could also put its users at risk of phishing or grooming.

    Will newer companies own up faster than the FAANGs? That’s not guaranteed: Founders often operate from first principles, which is good and bad; the content moderation learning curve is real. But OpenAI is much younger than Meta, so it is encouraging to hear that it is forming a new team to study child safety — even if it may be a result of the scrutiny it’s subjected to.

    Some startups, however, are not waiting for signs of trouble to take action. A provider of AI-enabled trust and safety solutions and part of Grove Ventures’ portfolio, ActiveFence is seeing more inbound requests, its CEO Noam Schwartz told me.

    “I’ve seen a lot of folks reaching out to our team from companies that were just founded or even pre-launched. They’re thinking about the safety of their products during the design phase [and] adopting a concept called safety by design. They are baking in safety measures inside their products, the same way that today you’re thinking about security and privacy when you’re building your features.”

    ActiveFence is not the only startup in this space, which Wired described as “trust and safety as a service.” But it is one of the largest, especially since it acquired Spectrum Labs in September, so it’s good to hear that its clients include not only big names afraid of PR crises and political scrutiny, but also smaller teams that are just getting started. Tech, too, has an opportunity to learn from past mistakes.





    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • Can AI do ugly? | TechCrunch

    Can AI do ugly? | TechCrunch


    W
    elcome to the TechCrunch Exchange, a weekly startups-and-markets newsletter. It’s inspired by the daily TechCrunch+ column where it gets its name. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here.

    This week, some thoughts on AI aesthetics, the challenge of uninsurability, and how to pitch a biotech startup to non-experts. — Anna

    Too good to be true

    Most tools claiming to detect AI-generated text fail spectacularly, my colleague Kyle Wiggers reported. That’s a paradox. I’m only human, but a lot of the AI-written pitches I receive don’t pass the sniff test yet; their style and wordiness feel off.

    Then again, it is probably too early to expect machines to detect a je ne sais quoi, even if we can see it. As fellow TechCrunch writer Ron Miller observed recently, “it’s really like AI-generated art, which has a certain look and feel.”

    That look and feel was made funnily obvious in a recent experiment conducted on one of my favorite social media accounts, Ugly Belgian Houses.





    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • The two faces of AI | TechCrunch

    The two faces of AI | TechCrunch

    We all make mistakes. But sometimes we forget that technology does, too — especially when it comes to AI, which is still in its early days in many respects.

    © 2023 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • Democracies are fragile, and hardware is hard | TechCrunch

    Democracies are fragile, and hardware is hard | TechCrunch

    W
    elcome to the TechCrunch Exchange, a weekly startups-and-markets newsletter. It’s inspired by the daily TechCrunch+ column where it gets its name. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here.

    Journalists and readers love scoops. But sometimes it’s important to state the obvious. This week, I’m reminded that democracies are fragile but that technology can help. And also that crowdfunding isn’t always the best way to launch an innovative product.

    On a side note, this newsletter will be taking a break until January 6 next year, so wishing you all happy holidays. — Anna

    Why agentic tech?

    When I read that a new venture firm called ex/ante had raised $33 million to invest in “agentic tech,” I got curious: What did that mean, and why were LPs such as Marc Andreessen and Union Square Ventures willing to back an emerging fund manager focusing on this category?

    I already had something to go on: Forbes’ Alex Konrad noted that ex/ante would invest in online privacy and security, and described agentic tech as “a fledgling term that the fund defines as technology that relates to human agency and rights in the digital age.” But I still wanted to know more, so I had a chat with its founder, 32-year-old Zoe Weinberg.

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • The cloud stock rally could help inch open the IPO window in 2024 | TechCrunch

    The cloud stock rally could help inch open the IPO window in 2024 | TechCrunch

    As 2023 comes to a close, a critical cohort of tech companies has regained the value it lost after the summer rally, potentially setting the stage for a stronger IPO cycle in early 2024 than some may anticipate. Cloud stocks are back, y’all!


    The Exchange explores startups, markets and money.

    Read it every morning on TechCrunch+ or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday.


    Let’s do a quick recap to refresh our memories.

    Earlier this year, we saw three companies go public in quick succession: Arm, Instacart and Klaviyo‘s IPOs represented a liquidity peak, but they failed to inspire other tech companies to a rush towards the public market.

    The three companies had pretty good IPOs, too, but they mostly failed to make the sort of splash some had hoped for. Arm’s stock has performed well compared to its IPO price (trading at $71.30 per share today, up from its $51 list price), but Klaviyo and Instacart haven’t fared as well. Klaivyo’s shares are trading 24 cents above its IPO price, while Instacart’s stock is trading at about $5 less than its listing price this morning.

    Alex Wilhelm

    Source link

  • Do you believe in job after job? | TechCrunch

    Do you believe in job after job? | TechCrunch

    People moving on to new jobs is not a bad thing — and not only when they have been laid off. That’s why it’s uplifting to see employers encourage this process.

    © 2023 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • Will Airbnb’s co-founder build your next home? | TechCrunch

    Will Airbnb’s co-founder build your next home? | TechCrunch

    W
    elcome to the TechCrunch Exchange, a weekly startups-and-markets newsletter. It’s inspired by the daily TechCrunch+ column where it gets its name. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here.

    Not long ago, I wondered whether startups could help solve the U.S. housing crisis. Now there’s a new name in town: Airbnb spinout Samara, which just secured fresh funding. As for Dig, it got acquired not long after I started digging into its category: data security posture management. — Anna

    The Airbnb playbook

    With a shortage of at least 3.8 million dwellings, the U.S. housing crisis isn’t showing many signs of improvement. Comparing the situation to what it was just one year ago, VC firm Gutter Capital noted that it even worsened in some respects — chiefly, investment.

    “[I]nvestor interest in the housing market, previously chilled, has frozen over,” managing partner James Gettinger wrote. “While rising interest rates were no match for the undersupply of housing, they were more than enough to scare away venture capital investors. We’ve been told by proptech funds that they only invest in software now. Regrettably, software can’t build homes.”

    In contrast, Gutter Capital still stands by the thesis it phrased one year ago: “There is a historic opportunity today to invest in businesses that accelerate the development of housing in the United States.”

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • Klarna’s financial glow-up is my favorite story in tech right now | TechCrunch

    Klarna’s financial glow-up is my favorite story in tech right now | TechCrunch

    Klarna’s Q3 2023 results are the latest in a growing list of evidence that the Swedish fintech giant is evolving from a loss-making unicorn to a durable company ready for the public markets.


    The Exchange explores startups, markets and money.

    Read it every morning on TechCrunch+ or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday.


    It wasn’t that long ago that Klarna had its valuation slashed by around 85%. At the time, the repricing made its ascent seem a bit specious, putting a question mark on the company’s value.

    How quickly things change. While Klarna’s numbers looked like standard unicorn fare in late 2022 (replete with unappetizing losses), the company managed to post stronger results as the year went along, masked somewhat by its full-year metrics.

    That spate of good news continued this year, with the company reporting improving credit results and even a profitable month. And it seems that after laying off staff and working to control costs, the good-news train is still rolling along at the company.

    Today, we’re diving deep into Klarna’s Q3 results with a focus on its return to profitability. If you care about BNPL as a category, e-commerce, or even just fintech writ large, you need to understand how Klarna is performing. To work!

    An improving story

    In the third quarter, Klarna reported revenue of 6 billion Krona ($549.9 million), up about 30% from 4.6 billion Krona ($421.6 million) in the third quarter of 2022. The company also reported an operating result of 130 million Krona ($11.9 million), a massive improvement on the 2.12 billion Krona ($192.6 million) loss a year ago. (All currency conversions use current SEK-USD values.)

    How did the company manage to both increase revenue and swing to profitability in just one year? Several efforts culminated in the improved numbers we see above:

    Alex Wilhelm

    Source link

  • Can AI lift our spirits? | TechCrunch

    Can AI lift our spirits? | TechCrunch

    The last quarter in venture capital was quite gloomy. Even AI didn’t change the picture that much, but its impact is starting to show in other ways. 

    © 2023 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Anna Heim

    Source link

  • So how about another 20 IPOs? | TechCrunch

    So how about another 20 IPOs? | TechCrunch

    The third quarter is behind us, but the scores are still being totted up. This week will bring a deluge of numbers from major tech companies, helping us better understand the state of the market, for example. Another lens into the third quarter that has yet to gel are its venture capital results. We’ve covered the big numbers from the United States, Europe, Latin America, Africa and India, and we’ve looked at how far capital has extended to underrepresented groups.


    The Exchange explores startups, markets and money.

    Read it every morning on TechCrunch+ or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday.


    But one key area of private-market performance that we haven’t yet given enough attention to is exits. Exits, the conversion of investments into cash or another returnable asset, is the key product of private equity and its sub-asset class venture capital (no jokes about bips of AUM being the real product fit here, but you can write them for yourself).

    We spend lots of time looking at venture dollars flowing into startups, and not enough, at times, on the matter of money going out. Let’s make up for a little bit of lost time, as the exit situation in the market today is very poor. Even more, key exits from Q3 2023 do more to demonstrate just how bad things are, not how much exit data may improve as the year moves toward a close.

    That means venture got a few IPOs last quarter, and they were not enough. We’d need to see Q3 2023 levels of exit volume monthly for a year to just get back into the ballpark of 2021-era exit value. That’s an ocean away.

    The data is not hard to parse. In the first three quarters of 2023, what PitchBook describes as “U.S. VC exit activity” was worth $9.1 billion, $6.6 billion and $35.8 billion, respectively. Clearly, the final figure is a massive improvement on what came before it, but it was largely predicated on just a handful of deals, in particular the public debuts of Instacart and Klaviyo. PitchBook’s own accounting calculates that just those two deals were worth “more than one-third of the total exit value in Q3.”

    Alex Wilhelm

    Source link

  • In insurtech, too, business models aren’t one-size-fits-all | TechCrunch

    In insurtech, too, business models aren’t one-size-fits-all | TechCrunch

    German insurtech company Getsafe is still bullish about direct-to-consumer insurance, but others are moving away from this business model.

    © 2023 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Anna Heim

    Source link