Ecomm, edtech see sharpest drop as startup fund raise falls 33% in 2022: PwC
Jan 11, 2023, 15:05 IST
- Even as funding activity slowed down in 2022, inflows into early stage startups went up 12%.
- Funding to almost all sectors declined with the exception of SaaS and media and entertainment.
- Funds received by e-commerce (B2C) went down by a massive 71%. Ecommerce (B2B) also saw a 54% drop in funds received.
- Globally, VCs are sitting on dry powder to the tune of $590 billion.
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Funds raised by Indian startups fell by 33% to $23.6 billion in 2022 against $35.2 billion raised a year before, according to a PwC India report, Startup Deals Tracker-CY22. The number of startups that raised funds fell moderately by 8% to 1,021 and the average ticket size of deals fell to $23 million from $32 million a year before.
Investors also seem to have shifted focus to early-stage startups, where funds that flowed in increased by nearly 12%.
“Despite the funding slowdown, some areas like SaaS and early-stage funding have remained upbeat. With significant dry powder waiting to be invested, it seems likely that the funding scenario will begin to normalise after two-three quarters. Until then, however, many startups are using this time to tighten operating models and optimise their cash runway by deferring discretionary spends and investments,” said Amit Nawka, partner- deals & India startups leader, PwC India.
The inflows into late-stage startups witnessed a 52% decline, as per the report which added that 21 startups attained unicorn status during in the year.
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Funding to almost all sectors declined with the exception of SaaS and media and entertainment. SaaS, which contributed to a quarter of the total funding activity, witnessed an increase of 20% in funding values. As 14 SaaS companies raised an excess of $100 million during the year, it also pushed up the average ticket size of deals in this segment to $4 million.
Fintech sector contributed to 20% of total fund inflow in 2022. But as compared to the year before, funding activity declined by 40%.
The sectors that saw the steepest decline in funds is e-commerce (B2C) where fund inflows went down by a massive 71%. Ecommerce (B2B) also saw a 54% drop in funds received. Funds to direct-to-consumer (D2C) startups declined by 26%, in spite of four companies raising over $100 million each during CY22.
As physical schools and colleges reopened, edtech which gained prominence during the pandemic lost its sheen. Inflows in edtech startups reduced by 58% in 2022.
Adding to that, the number of M&A deals involving startups also went down 17% in 2022, at 246 deals. “E-commerce and D2C (61) and SaaS (60) witnessed the highest number of M&A transactions in 2022. The year witnessed 199 domestic, 21 inbound and 26 outbound deals,” the report said.
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VCs pull back from the markets
The reduction in fund activity is an indication of cautiousness among investors as they continue to sit on dry powder to the tune of $590 billion, globally. Dry powder is unallocated funds that a PE or VC has, on hand. A large chunk of this dry powder were funds committed in 2022 and 2021.
“The build-up of dry powder is due to a market pullback by VC funds that are picky about their investments. The focus is on companies that have strong unit economics and a path to profitability,” the report said.
PwC also adds that the amount of dry power that VCs are sitting on shows that the market could see strong investment cycles ahead.
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