As we enter the final quarter of a blockbuster funding year, the record pace of global venture capital funding continues.
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More than $54 billion was invested in over 2,000 companies around the world in October. That marks the fourth-highest funding month in 2021, with year-over-year growth of 84 percent in October.
Two-thirds of global venture funding in October went to Series C and later funding stages, with $36 billion invested in 302 companies, per Crunchbase data.
A third of the funding was invested at seed and early-stage rounds, representing $18 billion in more than 1,700 companies.
New unicorns
Alongside the year-over-year growth in funding, the Crunchbase Unicorn Board added 43 new companies in October. The most active investors in these new unicorns were Bessemer Venture Partners, 8VC, Sequoia Capital India, Insight Partners, Lightspeed Venture Partners and Coatue —all with more than 10 investments over time in the current crop.
New unicorns that have raised the most funding to date include London-based Zopa, offering peer-to-peer loans; Berlin-based TIER Mobility, a shared electric moped company; and Palo Alto, California-based Medable, transforming clinical research with patient data. Leading sectors for new unicorns include fintech, health care, crypto, and data and analytics.
Unicorn companies as a cohort raised $20.3 billion in funding, or around 38 percent of total global funding for October.
Public debuts
The IPO markets for tech companies remained open with 34 venture-backed debuts in October.
The most highly valued company to go public this past month was San Francisco-based GitLab, a developer operations platform founded in 2011. Khosla Ventures, ICONIQ Capital, August Capital and GV were stockholders listed in its S-1, all with over 5 percent ownership.
WeWork finally went public via a SPAC that valued the company at around $9 billion, a fifth of what it was valued in a round led by SoftBank in 2019.
Other public debuts valued above $4 billion were Charlotte, North Carolina-based billing and payments platform AvidXchange, London-based Babylon, an online health care platform that went public via a SPAC, and San Francisco-based learning platform Udemy.
Looking forward
Global funding for 2021 could top $600 billion based on the current funding pace, compared to $334 billion for 2020.
Venture capital has expanded to more parts of the globe, showing greater growth year over year to South America- and Europe-based startups. This year has also been a record one for public debuts, and mergers and acquisitions.
And there are large amounts of capital available to still be deployed. Tiger Global announced a first close of a new fund at $8.8 billion, Sequoia Capital restructured its venture business into a single top fund and registered as an RIA, and ever larger seed funds were announced by leading venture firms.
In other words, there’s no slowdown in sight.
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Methodology
Funding rounds included in this report are seed, angel, venture, corporate-venture and private-equity rounds in venture-backed companies. This reflects data in Crunchbase as of Nov. 2, 2021.
Please note that all funding values are given in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted. Crunchbase converts foreign currencies to U.S. dollars at the prevailing spot rate from the date funding rounds, acquisitions, IPOs and other financial events are reported. Even if those events were added to Crunchbase long after the event was announced, foreign currency transactions are converted at the historic spot price.
Illustration: Dom Guzman
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