Connect With Us

Inside INdiana Business
Subscribe Now Log In
  • Home
  • News
    • Education
    • Health
    • Tech
    • STEM
    • Advanced Manufacturing & Logistics
    • Life Sciences
    • Ag INnovation
    • INPower
  • Videos
  • Big Wigs
    • Submit Big Wigs
  • Events
    • Engage Central Indiana – Indianapolis
    • Engage Northeast Indiana – Fort Wayne
    • Engage West Central Indiana – Terre Haute
    • Engage Greater Lafayette – West Lafayette
    • Engage Northwest Indiana – Valparaiso
    • Engage South Bend – Elkhart
    • Engage Southwest Indiana – Evansville
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • On-Air
    • TV & Radio Listings
  • Contact
    • About IIB
    • Meet the Team
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Gift Cards
    • Flagship Stations
    • Gerry’s Message
    • Speaking Engagement Request

Connect With Us

Indiana venture activity shows signs of strength, report says

Friday, April 14, 2023 05:20 PM EDT Updated: Sunday, April 16, 2023 11:07 PM EDT
By Susan Orr, Indianapolis Business Journal
(stock image courtesy: Pexels)

The number of venture investments nationwide and the value of those deals dropped sharply in the first quarter as compared to a year earlier, but the situation in Indiana is considerably rosier, according to a new PitchBook report.

PitchBook’s latest Venture Monitor report counts 2,856 venture investments nationwide worth a total of $37 billion in the first quarter. That’s 45.5% fewer deals than the 5,243 PitchBook counted during the first quarter of 2022. The total dollar value of those deals dropped 55.1%, from $82.4 billion a year ago.

The situation in Indiana was somewhat different: PitchBook recorded 41 venture investments in the state during the first quarter, a 12.8% drop from the 47 deals recorded during the same period in 2022. But the total value of those deals actually rose 24.7%, from $128 million to $159.6 million.

Indiana’s first-quarter deal value is “actually pretty impressive,” said Vincent Harrison, a venture capital analyst at PitchBook.

As to why Indiana may be showing relative strength in the continuing down market, Harrison said he believes it has to do with the remote work trend of the past few years coupled with the high inflation that has made traditional coastal tech hot spots even less affordable than they already were.

“As remote work becomes more popular and I no longer need to live in Silicon Valley to be a successful entrepreneur, I can go live in the Midwest. Or Colorado has been a really popular emerging hub for a lot of talent,” Harrison said. “If you look at inflation and just how expensive the cost of living in certain markets is becoming, I think you’ll probably see more engineers move out to these places that have lower costs of living.”

Looking at the numbers a slightly different way, data from the nation’s metro areas supports Harrison’s hypothesis.

The San Francisco metropolitan statistical area saw 2,629 venture investment deals worth a combined $59.6 billion in 2022, as compared with 2,234 deals worth a combined $46.8 billion in 2020. That represents a 17.7% increase in deal numbers and a 27.4% increase in the value of those deals over the two-year period.

In comparison, the Indianapolis/Carmel metropolitan statistical area saw its deal count increase 39.2% and the value of those deals rise 88.4% from 2020 to 2022, the PitchBook data shows. In raw numbers, the Indianapolis metro area saw 110 deals worth $630.9 million last year, as compared with 79 deals worth $334.5 million in 2020.

Indiana’s other metro areas did not have enough deals in each of these years to allow for similar comparisons.

PitchBook’s first-quarter Venture Monitor report noted that the San Francisco Bay Area accounted for 18.4% of all U.S. venture deals in the first quarter. That marked the third consecutive quarter that the Bay Area saw less than 20% of all deals, PitchBook said.

The trend is likely to continue into the second quarter, the report said, because last month’s collapse of California-based Silicon Valley Bank had more of an impact on the Bay Area than other U.S. markets.

Story Continues Below

Most Popular Stories

  • Catalent cuts 150 leadership, support jobs in Bloomington

  • Here’s who Holcomb appointed to commissions, boards

  • Nursing organization CEO to retire, new leader named

  • Study: Small modular nuclear could bring energy benefits for Purdue

  • Indy construction company marks 100-year milestone

  • Applications open for ‘Best Places to Work in Manufacturing’

Perspectives

Two cooks in the kitchen? Dealing with leadership overlap

Two cooks in the kitchen? Dealing with leadership overlap

Businesses go through leadership transitions for many reasons, including retirements, resignations, buyouts, and more. What happens when a transition occurs, and the previous owner is still in the picture?...

Inside INdiana Business

Inside INdiana Business
A division of IBJ Media

1 Monument Circle, Suite 300
Indianapolis, IN 46204

PHONE: (317) 634-6200

FAX: (317) 263-5060

NEWSLETTER@IIBNEWS.COM

  • Home
  • News
  • Videos
  • Gerry Dick
  • Newsletters
  • On-Air
  • Contact

Copyright © 2023 All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy | Terms of Service