Global VC investment fell from a five-quarter high of $95.5 billion in Q2’24 to a nearly seven-year low of $70.1 billion in Q3’24, amid ongoing geopolitical conflicts, the continued exit drought, anticipated seasonal lulls in investment in several key jurisdictions, and the uncertainty driven by the upcoming US presidential election.
The decline came despite another solid quarter of VC investment in AI; the sector accounted for six of the ten largest VC deals globally, including a $1.5 billion raise by Anduril Industries and a $1 billion raise by Safe Superintelligence, according to the Q3’24 edition of KPMG Private Enterprise’s Venture Pulse—a quarterly report that shines a spotlight on VC investment trends globally and in key jurisdictions around the world.
While the Americas continued to attract the largest share of VC investment in Q3’24, total investment in the region still fell from $58.6 billion in Q2’24 to $41.4 billion in Q3’24. In Asia, VC investment fell from $18.5 billion to $15.6 billion quarter-over-quarter, while in Europe it dropped from $17.9 billion to $12.5 billion.
Global exit value fell to a six-quarter low of $39.2 billion, driven primarily by a slowdown in US-based exit activity—which fell from $25.2 billion to $11.2 billion between Q2’24 and Q3’24, as the number of exits fell to a seventeen-quarter low of 244. Asia, which saw a five-year low of $11.2 billion in exit value in Q2’24, saw exit value jump to $18.2 billion in Q3’24.
“AI investments drove the lion’s share of VC investment activity in Q3’24. But even within AI, a lot of deals were somewhat smaller than we’ve seen in recent quarters. This reflects somewhat of a trend in investors shifting their focus from core AI companies focused on LLMs (Large Language Models) and the like to companies with highly targeted industry solutions. Defense-tech was also a big winner in this quarter, in addition to biotech,” said Conor Moore, Global Head, KPMG Private Enterprise, KPMG International.