Reports – CB Insights Research https://www.cbinsights.com/research Tue, 29 Oct 2024 21:28:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 State of CVC Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/corporate-venture-capital-trends-q3-2024/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 13:00:57 +0000 In Q3’24, global CVC-backed funding fell 5% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $15.7B — alongside a 10% decline in deals — as investors navigated persistent macroeconomic headwinds from global inflation pressures and elevated interest rates to China’s economic challenges. Despite these declines, …

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In Q3’24, global CVC-backed funding fell 5% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $15.7B — alongside a 10% decline in deals — as investors navigated persistent macroeconomic headwinds from global inflation pressures and elevated interest rates to China’s economic challenges.

Despite these declines, $100M+ mega-rounds comprised 51% of total CVC-backed funding in Q3’24, a notable increase from a quarterly average of 37% in 2023. Meanwhile, two-thirds of CVC deals this year have gone to early-stage companies, highlighting a strategic shift toward more emerging opportunities, especially in AI.

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Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of CVC:

  • ​​Global CVC-backed funding drops 5% to $15.7B in Q3’24. Nevertheless, that figure is still the second-highest quarterly level since the beginning of 2023. Meanwhile, a 10% QoQ decline to 773 deals — the lowest total since 2018 — suggests that CVCs are increasingly selective, similar to the wider venture market.

Global CVC-backed funding drops 5% QoQ to $15.7B

  • The average CVC-backed deal size has increased 31% so far this year to $27.1M, highlighting investors’ willingness to take risks when they find the right opportunity. However, the median deal size remains the same as last year at $8M, signaling that investors are only more aggressive regarding the largest deals.

CVCs are more aggressive with the largest rounds as average CVC-backed deal size jumps 31%

  • Funding to CVC-backed mega-rounds (deals worth $100M+) represents 51% of total funding in Q3’24. This percentage — roughly in line with the first 2 quarters of 2024 — is up significantly from an average of 37% in 2023, further suggesting that investors are currently willing to make large bets when they decide to invest.
  • Early-stage rounds represent 66% of total CVC deal share this year, the highest level in over a decade. CVCs are increasingly focused on early-stage startups, likely driven by the record levels of AI funding and the fact that, across investor types, 72% of deals to AI companies this year are early-stage.

Early-stage deal share hits its highest level in over a decade among CVCs

  • CVC-backed funding in the US ticks up to $10.5B. Among major global regions, the US continued to lead in CVC-backed funding in Q3’24, followed by Europe at $2.6B and Asia at $1.3B. Within the US, defense tech provider Anduril raised the largest CVC-backed deal with its $1.5B Series F round (CVC investors include Franklin Venture Partners), followed by AI chip developer Groq with its $640M Series D round (backed by Samsung Catalyst).

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State of AI Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/ai-trends-q3-2024/ Tue, 29 Oct 2024 13:00:04 +0000 In Q3’24, global AI deal count skyrocketed 24% QoQ to reach 1,245 — its highest quarterly level since peaking in Q1’22. This contrasted sharply with activity in the broader venture sphere, where deal count fell by 10% QoQ to hit …

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In Q3’24, global AI deal count skyrocketed 24% QoQ to reach 1,245 — its highest quarterly level since peaking in Q1’22. This contrasted sharply with activity in the broader venture sphere, where deal count fell by 10% QoQ to hit its lowest level since 2016/2017.

While AI deals in Q3’24 included massive $1B+ rounds to defense tech provider Anduril and AI lab Safe Superintelligence, global AI funding actually dropped by 29% QoQ. This was driven by a 77% decline in funding from $1B+ AI rounds QoQ.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of AI:

  • Global AI deal count climbs 24% QoQ to reach 1,245 — its highest quarterly level since peaking in Q1’22. This bucked the trend in overall venture deals (-10% QoQ), signaling that investor interest in AI remains strong despite the broader cooling in venture markets. AI funding, on the other hand, fell by 29% QoQ to $16.8B, driven by a 77% decline in funding from $1B+ AI rounds QoQ. 

Global AI deal count climbs to 1,245 in Q3'24, marking a 24% increase QoQ

  • The average AI deal size is $23.5M in 2024 so far — up 28% vs. $18.4M in full-year 2023. This upward trend has been influenced by a rise in massive $1B+ deals, with AI startups drawing 9 of these deals in 2024 so far vs. 4 in full-year 2023. Top $1B+ rounds in 2024 YTD include: 
    • xAI — $6B Series B at a $24B valuation
    • Anthropic — $2.8B Series D at an $18.4B valuation
    • Anduril — $1.5B Series F at a $14B valuation
    • G42 — $1.5B investment from Microsoft
    • CoreWeave — $1.1B Series C at a $19B valuation

These deals aren’t solely responsible for pushing up the average — the median AI deal size is up 9% in 2024 so far.

  • AI unicorn births more than double QoQ to reach 13 — 54% of the broader venture total in Q3’24. Generative AI continues to be a key theme for new unicorns (private companies reaching $1B+ valuations). More than half of the AI unicorns born in Q3’24 are genAI startups, and they are working across a variety of areas — including AI for 3D environments (World Labs), code generation (Codeium), and legal workflow automation (Harvey).

Among new genAI unicorns in Q3’24, Safe Superintelligence — co-founded by OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever — landed the most sizable valuation. The AI lab was valued at $5B after raising a $1B Series A round in September 2024.

In Q3'24, AI unicorn births jump to 13 — more than half of the broader venture total

  • AI M&A exits fall by 48% QoQ to hit 62 in Q3’24. The deals that did occur showcase how enterprises are strategically scooping up AI startups to improve their offerings and maintain a competitive edge. For example, the largest AI M&A deal in Q3’24 was AMD’s acquisition of AI lab Silo AI, which could help the semiconductor company enhance the development and deployment of AI models on its hardware. Meanwhile, Salesforce picked up unstructured data management startup Zoomin to support its AI agent offerings.

AI M&A exits drop by 48% QoQ in Q3'24

  • Among major global regions, the US continues to lead in AI funding and deals. AI startups based in the US drew $11.4B across 566 deals in Q3’24, accounting for over two-thirds of global AI funding and 45% of global AI deals. Within the US, Silicon Valley still dominates AI funding and deals, but other metros are gaining ground. In Q3’24, Los Angeles and New York saw their AI deal counts rise QoQ while Silicon Valley watched its count drop for the second quarter straight.

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Fintech 100: The most promising fintech startups of 2024 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/top-fintech-startups-2024/ Thu, 24 Oct 2024 13:00:00 +0000 CB Insights has unveiled the seventh annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies in the world. For companies interested in the future of fintech, these startups — working on …

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CB Insights has unveiled the seventh annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies in the world.

For companies interested in the future of fintech, these startups — working on everything from deploying novel AI solutions across the landscape to expanding access to financial services — should be on your radar for partnership and investment opportunities.

The list primarily includes early- and mid-stage startups driving innovation across fintech. Our research team picked winning companies based on CB Insights datasets, including deal activity, industry partnerships, team strength, investor strength, employee headcount, and proprietary Commercial Maturity and Mosaic scores. We also dug into Analyst Briefings submitted directly to us by startups.

Please click to enlarge.

Fintech 100 2024 map: Lending, wealth management, compliance and risk management, data extraction, embedded finance, workflow automation, banking, insurance, sustainability enablement, financial management and accounting, cryptocurrency and blockchain, payment acceptance, spend management, fraud detection and prevention, cross-border payments, payroll, capital markets

Here is a summary of the 2024 Fintech 100 cohort highlights:

  • The 100 winners include 13 wealth management companies, 11 in embedded finance, and 10 in insurance.
  • $7.2B in equity funding raised over time, including more than $2B in 2024 so far (as of 10/23/2024).
  • Nearly 50% are early-stage companies (primarily seed/angel or Series A).
  • 52 companies from outside the United States, across 23 countries on 6 continents. This includes 17 companies from 11 emerging and developing economies.
  • 850+ business relationships since 2022, including with industry leaders like Mastercard, State Street, and Flipkart.

Companies are categorized by their primary focus area and client base. Categories in the market map are not mutually exclusive.

CB Insights customers can interact with the entire Fintech 100 list here and view a detailed category breakdown using the Expert Collection.

2024 FINTECH 100 COHORT HIGHLIGHTS

Funding and valuations

The 2024 Fintech 100 winners have raised $7.2B across 370+ disclosed equity deals to date (as of 10/23/2024).

Gaming payments company Coda Payments and rent rewards company Bilt Rewards lead all winners in disclosed equity funding (with $715M and $560M in funding, respectively). 

In 2024 so far, this year’s winners have raised just over $2B across 72 disclosed equity deals.

 

2024 funding tops $2B for Fintech 100 winners

Three winners have raised mega-rounds ($100M+ deals) in 2024 so far: 

  • Bilt Rewards — $200M Series C, $150M Series C – II
  • Akur8 — $120M Series C
  • FundGuard — $100M Series C

Just 5 companies on this year’s list have reached unicorn status (a $1B+ valuation). Amid the broader venture slowdown, just one winner has hit unicorn status in 2024 so far: Pennylane, a France-based financial management and accounting platform for businesses.

Stage breakdown and commercial maturity

Nearly half — 48 — of this year’s Fintech 100 winners are early-stage companies (primarily seed/angel or Series A).

More than 60% of the companies on the list (62) have a CB Insights Commercial Maturity score — which measures a private company’s current ability to compete for customers or serve as a partner — of 4, or Scaling. This indicates they are gaining market traction and growing clients, partners, headcount, and revenue. 

Twenty-six winners have a score of 3, or Deploying, which means they have validated ideas and are beginning commercial distribution.

Top investors

Plug and Play Ventures leads all venture capital (VC) firms, including CVC firms, in the number of winners backed. The 2024 Fintech 100 companies in its portfolio operate across financial management and accounting (Finally), capital markets (FundGuard), payment acceptance (AiFi, Fintoc), banking (Tuum), wealth management (Boldin), and payroll (WorkPay). 

Meanwhile, General Catalyst leads in the total number of investments in the 2024 Fintech 100, as it has invested 13 times across 6 companies. It has invested in Bilt Rewards, financial management & accounting firm Collective, alternative credit scoring company Nova Credit, cross-border payments platform Finom, student loan management platform Summer, and AI agent Powder.

2024 Fintech 100: Top 5 venture investors (by disclosed number of winners backed)

Geographic distribution

Just over half (52) of this year’s Fintech 100 winners are based outside of the United States. The United Kingdom leads all non-US countries with 12 winners, and Canada and Singapore are tied for second with 6 companies each. 

Seventeen companies on this year’s list come from 11 emerging and developing economies (Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Egypt, India, Kenya, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Thailand, and Uruguay). Many of these winners are focused on solutions driving financial inclusion and accessibility for groups like small businesses and consumers building their credit.

Headcount growth

This year’s Fintech 100 winners collectively employ more than 18,000 people. Median year-over-year headcount growth is more than 30%.

Bilt leads all winners with $3.1M in equity funding per employee. Embedded finance company Brim Financial, blockchain company Fnality, and Coda Payments are tied for second with $1.6M per employee.

2024 Fintech 100: Top companies by equity funding per employee

Company health

Eighty-three of this year’s winning companies have a CB Insights Mosaic score — a proprietary measure of private company health and growth potential — of at least 700 out of 1,000 (as of 10/23/24). Compared to all private companies — fintechs or otherwise — with Mosaic scores, these 83 winners rank in the top 4% by Mosaic score. 

Bilt Rewards leads the cohort with a score of 952. Nova Credit and Arta are tied for second with 883.

Winners deploy AI across a variety of use cases

AI’s dominance in the venture market and broader tech conversations is reflected in this year’s Fintech 100 cohort. 

Several winners have developed AI solutions to automate financial services operations. For example, Alkymi and Saphyre are among the handful of companies using AI to analyze and extract data from financial documents.

But winners are also deploying AI within specific financial services sectors, including embedded finance, compliance, and insurance.

For instance, Gynger uses AI and data analytics to quickly approve and underwrite financing. The company is backed by PayPal Ventures and Google’s AI-focused venture arm Gradient Ventures

Meanwhile, Norm Ai offers AI agents for compliance teams, enabling them to assess content or actions against regulatory requirements. The company raised a $27M Series A round in June 2024 from investors including Bain Capital Ventures and Citi Ventures.

Delos Insurance Solutions, on the other hand, issues property insurance and analyzes satellite data using AI to identify areas with greater wildfire risk. Its founders’ backgrounds in the space industry inform their approach to data gathering via satellite.

Delos Insurance: Key people

Fintechs gear solutions toward financial inclusion and accessibility

Many of this year’s winners are focused on making financial services and technology more accessible to growing customer segments. 

Small businesses are a focus worldwide. This year’s list includes solutions like Sequoia Capital– and Founders Fund-backed Found, which offers banking for self-employed people and small business owners. Meanwhile, Pakistan-based NayaPay offers financial management for consumers as well as small businesses. Singapore-based YouTrip also has both B2C and B2B platforms for cross-border payments, focusing its B2B services on small businesses in southeast Asia. 

Companies in this year’s cohort are also targeting consumers building their financial profiles and wealth. US-based MAJORITY allows individuals to get banked in the US without social security numbers. OTO, meanwhile, offers loans for electric bike and scooter purchases in India. Banks are hesitant to finance the purchases despite strong government support for the vehicles, so the massive consumer market is turning to fintechs.

Meanwhile, companies like Bilt Rewards and CheQ are helping consumers manage their credit and build toward major purchases in different ways. Bilt converts rent payments into points that can be redeemed toward a down payment on a home, and it can also send renters’ on-time payment reports to credit bureaus. 

In India, where credit cards have lower penetration but are growing quickly, CheQ helps consumers pay off all of their credit cards and earn rewards on one digital platform. It aims to support users who are new to the credit system and offers free credit reports and tips on managing credit. The company recently announced a partnership with India’s e-commerce giant Flipkart to enable consumers to earn extra points on purchases during Flipkart’s sale event.

 

CheQ partners with India's e-commerce leader to help shoppers build rewards

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State of Digital Health Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/digital-health-trends-q3-2024/ Thu, 17 Oct 2024 13:00:18 +0000 Despite a small bump in deals, digital health funding fell once again in Q3’24, hitting its second-lowest quarterly level since 2017. Meanwhile, M&A activity is on the rise, climbing for the second straight quarter in Q3’24. Based on our deep …

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Despite a small bump in deals, digital health funding fell once again in Q3’24, hitting its second-lowest quarterly level since 2017.

Meanwhile, M&A activity is on the rise, climbing for the second straight quarter in Q3’24.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF digital health Q3’24 REPORT

Get 78+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in digital health.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of digital health:

  • Global digital health funding drops 23% QoQ to hit $3.3B in Q3’24, marking the second-lowest quarterly funding level since 2017. This decline comes despite a slight uptick in deal count QoQ. However, the average deal size in 2024 YTD is $17.8M — a 51% increase from the full-year 2023 average of $11.8M. This jump in average deal size, amid a downturn in deals over the same period, reflects that investors are concentrating larger sums on fewer, later-stage ventures.

Global digital health funding drops 23% QoQ in Q3'24

  • Digital health mega-round deals ($100M+ deals) drop slightly in Q3’24, falling from 9 to 7 QoQ. Meanwhile, mega-round funding and share of total funding also declined QoQ, underscoring a more cautious investor approach. Mega-rounds accounted for 30% of total digital health funding in Q3 — down from 44% in Q2. Top Q3’24 mega-rounds (by round amount) included:
    • Women’s health app Flo Healths $200M Series C
    • Digital-first health insurance provider Alan‘s $193M Series F

Q3'24 digital health mega-rounds amount to $1B — 30% of quarterly funding

 

  • The US accounts for 52% of digital health deals in Q3’24, down from 61% in Q2. Meanwhile, Europe and Asia both saw their deal shares rise to 21% in Q3. Asia experienced a greater jump in deal share, gaining 7 percentage points QoQ while Europe gained 3. This shift suggests growing investor interest in markets outside of traditional US hubs.

US digital health deal share drops QoQ in Q3'24, while Europe and Asia see their shares rise

  • Q3’24 sees the emergence of 2 new digital health unicorns — both based in Europe. The newest members of the digital health unicorn club are UK-based Flo Health, a women’s health app, and Huma, a remote patient monitoring platform. Against the backdrop of a broader downturn in new digital health unicorns, these births highlight Europe’s growing importance in the digital health landscape.

Q3'24 sees the emergence of 2 digital health unicorns — both based in Europe

  • Digital health M&A exits continue to climb in Q3’24, rising 23% QoQ to 37. This rising M&A appetite may be partly fueled by established companies seizing opportunities to scoop up innovative technologies amid a challenging funding environment for startups. The largest M&A deal in Q3’24 was LetsGetChecked’s $525M acquisition of digital pharmacy Truepill.

Digital health M&A exits rise for the second straight quarter in Q3'24

 

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State of Fintech Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q3-2024/ Tue, 15 Oct 2024 13:00:20 +0000 On the surface, Q3’24 was a sobering quarter for fintech. Funding declined by 25% from Q2’24, to $7.3B. Total deals also dropped 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 753 — their lowest quarterly level since 2017. However, average deal size has remained …

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On the surface, Q3’24 was a sobering quarter for fintech. Funding declined by 25% from Q2’24, to $7.3B. Total deals also dropped 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 753 — their lowest quarterly level since 2017.

However, average deal size has remained roughly stable in 2024 YTD, suggesting dealmakers are putting more money behind a select group of fintech companies.

Download the full report to access comprehensive data and charts on the evolving state of fintech across sectors, geographies, and more.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q3’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in payments, banking, wealth tech, and more.

Below, we cover key takeaways from the report.

  • Global fintech funding sinks to $7.3B, a 25% QoQ decline. However, Q2’24 funding was propped up in part by mega-rounds for Stripe and AlphaSense totaling $1.3B. Excluding those rounds, the decline from Q2’24 to Q3’24 would have been 13%.

Global fintech funding drops 25% QoQ after Q2 spike

  • Deal volume drops 16%. Total deals for fintechs continued to decline, falling 16% from 892 in Q2’24 to 753 in Q3’24. This marks the lowest quarterly level since 2017. For comparison, fintech deal volume clocked in at nearly 1,500 two years ago, in Q3’22 — roughly double where it stands now.

Global fintech deal volume slides for a 2nd straight quarter

  • Average deal size remains stable at $12.7M. Despite deal volume declining, average deal size has remained roughly flat YTD, at $12.7M, compared to $13.2M for full-year 2023. The decline in deal volume and stable deal size indicates dealmakers narrowed their focus to fewer, higher-dollar bets.

Fewer deals, bigger checks: Average deal size remains roughly stable, while deal volume declines

  • 52% of the top early-stage deals are in less-crowded fintech markets. Just over half of the top early-stage deals occurred in financial services markets outside the US and UK — in countries like France, India, Italy, and Kenya. Less-crowded markets like these offer more room for early-stage fintechs to find niches and grow their client bases. 

Majority of top early-stage deals are in less-crowded geographic markets

  • Wealth tech funding increases by 67%, thanks to 2 $100M+ mega-rounds. Wealth tech funding increased the most of any fintech sector QoQ, from $0.6B in Q2’24 to $1.0B in Q3’24. The increase was fueled by 2 substantial deals: 
    • $242M Series F round for turnkey retirement plan provider Human Interest
    • $200M Series B round for Earned Wealth, a digital wealth manager targeting medical professionals.

Two mega-rounds drive surge in wealth tech funding

ADDITIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES RESEARCH FROM CB INSIGHTS:

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State of Venture Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/venture-trends-q3-2024/ Thu, 03 Oct 2024 13:00:39 +0000 AI has established a commanding presence across the VC landscape. In some ways venture has become less dramatic. The period of steep decline in funding that followed the dizzying heights of 2021 has given way to relatively moderate quarterly variations. …

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AI has established a commanding presence across the VC landscape.

In some ways venture has become less dramatic. The period of steep decline in funding that followed the dizzying heights of 2021 has given way to relatively moderate quarterly variations.

But even in a more sober fundraising environment, excitement over AI has become a major driving force for investors. One in every 3 VC dollars now goes to the tech. Silicon Valley, a major AI hub, is tightening its hold on investor cash. AI startups are exiting years faster than those working on other technologies.

As interest rates fall and the appetite for riskier assets increases, expect AI startups to be top of mind for an increasing number of investors in the months ahead.

Download the full report to access comprehensive data and charts on the evolving state of VC across sectors, geographies, and more.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF VENTURE Q3’24 REPORT

Get 230+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest trends in venture capital.

Below, we cover key shifts in the landscape, including:

  1. Quarterly declines in global VC funding and deals
  2. AI startups grab 1 in 3 VC dollars
  3. Performance from recent tech IPOs
  4. Silicon Valley is only getting stronger
  5. New unicorns remain rare
  6. The US claims the bulk of AI innovation
  7. How global VC stacks up against economic output
  8. 76% of top deals go to B2B startups
  9. AI startups exit 6 years sooner than the rest of tech

Let’s dive in.

Global VC has a tepid quarter as funding and deals shrink

Topline figures paint a sobering picture for venture, as both global funding and deals ticked down quarter-over-quarter (QoQ). The quarterly levels place Q3’24 on par with where VC was in 2016/2017.

However, while deal volume has progressively declined, the size of deals that do happen has grown. In 2024 so far, the average deal clocks in at $13.9M (up from $12M in full-year 2023), while the median is worth $3M (up from 2023’s $2.5M). 

The more cautious investment environment is likely driving a flight to quality as selective investors isolate the most promising ventures.

AI startups grab nearly 1 out of every 3 VC dollars

AI startups are capturing nearly a third (31%) of all venture funding right now — the second-highest share on record, following Q2’s 35%.

Within AI, a company’s age and stage don’t always correlate to the size of financing rounds. One of the largest rounds in Q3’24, for instance, was a mammoth $1B deal to Safe Superintelligence (SSI) — an early-stage startup founded in June by OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever. The company has just 10 employees.

SSI’s deal is the 9th $1B+ AI equity round this year. Given their willingness to participate in such large rounds to so many companies, investors appear confident that a new tech giant will emerge from the space — and apparently have FOMO.

Yet despite investors’ bullishness, many of today’s fledgling AI startups will struggle to live up to lofty expectations, and some will ultimately fail. Even AI giants like OpenAI face the daunting task of keeping costs in control: the AI leader’s losses are expected to amount to $5B this year

Two-thirds of recent top tech IPOs have held or gained value

The AI boom is also giving recent public debuts a boost. 

We analyzed 15 of the companies with the largest tech IPOs since 2022 to see whether they’ve gained or lost value since they filed to go public IPOs. The majority (10 out of 15) have either held steady or gained value as public players — a positive indicator for tech IPOs more broadly, which until recently were getting beaten down badly in the public markets. The fact that startups are able to maintain and even gain value as public companies will likely draw out other IPO-ready companies.

And AI is an important factor driving gains for several of these companies. For instance:

  • Arm’s value has nearly tripled since it debuted late last year. The chip designer is a leader in CPUs for AI computing hardware, including providing the architecture for AI chip firms like Nvidia.
  • Tempus is deploying AI across its precision medicine offerings, which has helped buoy its value by 31% since its IPO filing. (It legally changed its name from Tempus Labs to Tempus AI in early 2023.)
  • Like Arm, Astera Labs, which offers AI infrastructure & connectivity hardware, has benefited from the swell in widespread adoption of AI. Its value has grown 45% since filing in March 2024. 

It’s not universal — enterprise AI firm 4Paradigm, for instance, has seen its value slashed by over half since debuting. But this could be due more to geopolitical forces, as China-based 4Paradigm has faced an uphill battle in sustaining investor interest because of US restrictions. (4Paradigm was placed on a US export control list in early 2023.) 

The AI boom is consolidating Silicon Valley's dominance

Another result of the AI explosion: Cash is concentrating in Silicon Valley, home to over a third of the US-based AI startups. In fact, the metro’s share of US venture funding — across sectors — has climbed to a recent high of 41% this year.

In Q3’24, Silicon Valley-based startups raised $10.5B — more than 2.5x that of New York ($3.9B), the second-ranked metro. LA and Boston follow, with $2.9B and $2.8B, respectively. 

Notably, deal activity in Silicon Valley remains overwhelmingly early-stage — meaning it’s not just a handful of more established startups raising massive rounds. More than two-thirds of Silicon Valley’s deals this year are at the seed or Series A stages.

Q3 sees more new unicorns, though it remains a rare feat

Newly minted billion-dollar startups remain few and far between. Q3’24 saw 24 startups reach that mark — a noticeable bump from the previous quarter’s 16, though a fraction of what we saw during the tech boom of 2021 and early 2022. 

Valuations remain pressured at the later stages of investment, with many of the unicorns minted in years gone by likely worth less than $1B in reality. On the other hand, valuations are showing strength at the earlier stages. Among seed-stage startups, the median valuation for deals this year is $13.5M — the highest annual level on record.

There are a few common themes among the latest batch of new unicorns:

  • AI is minting more unicorns than any other sector. More than half of the new unicorns in Q3’24 are AI companies. Among these, several are working to bring greater spatial awareness to AI systems, from Skild AI’s intelligent humanoid robotics to World Labs3D world-building tools. Others are developing enterprise AI agents & copilots, like Harvey in the legal domain and Codeium in software engineering.
  • India’s startups are climbing the ranks. The country contributed 3 of Q3’24’s new unicorns: Ather Energy, MoneyView, and Rapido. India ranks third globally for total unicorns after the US and China, and it had a strong funding quarter in Q3’24, with startups raising $4B — up 29% QoQ and 111% YoY.
  • a16z and Sequoia are the most active investors in backing new unicorns. The investors each backed 4 of Q3’24’s freshly minted $1B+ companies. Andreessen Horowitz invested in Saronic Technologies, World Labs, Story Protocol, and Safe Superintelligence; while Sequoia Capital backed Skild AI, Harvey, Chainguard, and Safe Superintelligence.

The US is dominating AI

CB Insights tracks over 15,000 AI startups globally. And while 99 countries and regions around the world have at least 1 AI startup, the US is the undisputed leader in AI startup activity — and by a substantial margin. 

43% of all AI startups are based in the country. The distant No. 2 and No. 3 countries are China (9% of AI startups) and the UK (7%). 

The UAE, Israel, and Singapore lead in venture activity as a share of GDP

While the US has long dominated the global venture scene when it comes to absolute funding and deal activity, several countries rank above the US in terms of the ratio of venture funding to GDP: the United Arab Emirates, Israel, and Singapore. 

These 3 countries pace ahead of the US in terms of VC as a proportion of overall economic activity, suggesting they are punching above their weight in terms of fostering startup activity. 

For instance, UAE-based startups have raised over $3B in funding over the last year (since 10/1/2023), and the country’s 2023 GDP came in at $504B. That represents $1 in VC to $158 in GDP (1/158) — a stronger ratio than any other country with at least $1B in annual venture funding.

Activity in the region has recently been fueled by AI firm G42, which raised a $1.5B round from Microsoft in April. (As part of the deal, G42 will use Microsoft’s Azure cloud offering, and Microsoft will also gain access to G42’s data centers.)

Israel and Singapore hold the No. 2 and 3 spots, with venture funding to GDP ratios of 1/166 and 1/198, respectively. 

Venture investors vastly favor B2B business models

Right now, the venture capital industry is all in on B2B startups. Among the 100 largest deals in Q3’24, three-fourths went to startups that use a B2B business model (either exclusively or in combination with other models like B2C or B2G). 

The B2B distribution model — particularly at the enterprise level — has gained appeal in recent years as a potentially more stable, recurring source of revenue for startups, especially during periods of volatile consumer spending.

If you're an AI startup, you exit much faster

The buzz around AI is translating to faster exit velocity for startups in the space. Breaking down all the exits that have taken place this year, it’s clear AI startups exit at a much faster rate — 6 years faster, to be exact. It takes the median AI company just 7 years to exit from the year it was founded, compared to 13 years for non-AI companies.

While this trend holds true for recent AI IPOs, it’s most commonly seen among M&A deals, which represent the vast majority of AI exits this year.

Corporations are among the top acquirers of AI startups, with many looking to gain an edge by rapidly adding novel AI tools to their product suites.

Another driving factor is “acqui-hires,” where an acquirer purchases a startup primarily for its talent. We’ve seen this among some of the youngest AI startups to be acquired. For instance, SydeLabs and Laiyer, both founded in 2023, were acquired by Protect AI this year. In both cases, Protect AI absorbed the startups’ teams.

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Game Changers 2025: 9 technologies that will change the world https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/game-changing-technologies-2025/ Wed, 25 Sep 2024 14:48:51 +0000 Prefer to listen in? Check out our discussion of the report here:  New breakthroughs are altering the future direction of tech and its influence on the world at large. While AI has captured headlines, it’s just one part of a …

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Prefer to listen in? Check out our discussion of the report here: 



New breakthroughs are altering the future direction of tech and its influence on the world at large.

While AI has captured headlines, it’s just one part of a broader technological surge. Startups and tech giants alike are making strides in fields as diverse as clean energy, space exploration, and human longevity.

Our Game Changers 2025 report highlights 9 emerging technologies that could transform how we live, work, and interact with our environment over the next 5-10 years and beyond. 

These include:

  • Ultra-deep drilling: Advanced drilling techniques that can go far deeper to unlock superhot rock energy
  • AI agent marketplaces: Enabling dynamic integration and collaboration of specialized agents across software platforms 
  • Quantum-optimized portfolios: Using quantum computing to build higher-performing portfolios, faster
  • Cellular & epigenetic reprogramming: Altering the gene expression of cells to extend the healthy human lifespan
  • GPS-less navigation systems: Approaches that boost the resiliency and accuracy of positioning services critical to global infrastructure

Download the full report to explore all 9 technologies and the data behind them — including drivers, startups, and implications — in detail.

GAME CHANGERS 2025

See 9 world-changing technologies in this free report.

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Here’s how successful strategy teams drive influence across their organizations https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/corporate-strategy-success-influence/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 21:03:59 +0000 Defining and measuring success for corporate strategy teams is a notoriously challenging task. In August 2024, we surveyed 50 corporate strategy leaders (at the Director-level or above) working at companies across major industries to identify key challenges they face in …

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Defining and measuring success for corporate strategy teams is a notoriously challenging task.

In August 2024, we surveyed 50 corporate strategy leaders (at the Director-level or above) working at companies across major industries to identify key challenges they face in driving influence across their organizations and the approaches they use to address them.

Only 40% have clearly defined KPIs to measure their success and alignment issues appeared as the top pain point for strategic planning.

Download the full report to delve into the most common pain points faced by strategy teams, the tactics used by the most influential teams to improve strategic planning, and what challenges still remain unaddressed.

THE STRATEGY TEAM PLAYBOOK

Download the free report on the key challenges facing corporate strategy teams — and how they overcome them.

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Big Tech in Energy: How Amazon, Google, Microsoft, & Nvidia are advancing the global energy transition https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/big-tech-energy-amazon-google-microsoft-nvidia/ Wed, 04 Sep 2024 16:53:08 +0000 The energy sector presents big tech companies with opportunities to address the growing demand for clean energy solutions and meet their sustainability goals. These tech leaders are collaborating with energy incumbents and startups alike to tap into renewable energy sources …

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The energy sector presents big tech companies with opportunities to address the growing demand for clean energy solutions and meet their sustainability goals.

These tech leaders are collaborating with energy incumbents and startups alike to tap into renewable energy sources and decarbonize their operations.

While these big tech players are competing in the energy space, they are also developing unique strategies:

  • Amazon is working to decarbonize its transportation and fulfillment center operations, with a focus on hydrogen tech.
  • Google is pioneering new models for clean energy procurement as it works to boost the sustainability of its data center network.
  • Microsoft is focusing on renewable energy sources — like solar and fusion — and carbon capture technologies to meet the growing energy demands of its AI-driven operations.
  • Nvidia is enhancing data center energy efficiency and investing in the development of a green and reliable power grid.

DOWNLOAD THE BIG TECH IN ENERGY 2024 REPORT

Find out where Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Nvidia are focused in energy — and where they plan to move next.

This report uses CB Insights datasets like investments, acquisitions, business relationships, company scouting reports, earnings transcripts, and more. Learn more about our data here.

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Future Tech Hotshots: 52 emerging tech startups that will have big, successful exits https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/future-tech-hotshots/ Fri, 30 Aug 2024 21:48:03 +0000 Of the thousands of emerging tech startups that have raised funding in the last year, which are the most likely to make a big splash and secure a large exit? The question is certainly top of mind for corporations getting …

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Of the thousands of emerging tech startups that have raised funding in the last year, which are the most likely to make a big splash and secure a large exit?

The question is certainly top of mind for corporations getting to grips with emerging technology like generative AI — the answer could help identify future competitors, partners, new markets, or acquisition targets.  

Using CB Insights’ proprietary data and metrics — including Exit Probability, Commercial Maturity, Mosaic, headcount, patents, and funding — we identified the 52 emerging players our data says are most likely to have an outsized influence in the next 5–10 years and have a strong exit. 

Download the report to see:

  • The full list of Future Tech Hotshots
  • Key themes and industry analysis
  • Methodology

SEE THE 52 FUTURE TECH HOTSHOTS

Get the free report to see which emerging startups are most poised to get a successful exit according to our data.

Future Tech Hotshots

MORE TOP COMPANY LISTS FROM CB INSIGHTS:

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Insurtech 50: The most promising insurtech startups of 2024 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/top-insurtech-startups-2024/ Wed, 28 Aug 2024 13:00:12 +0000 CB Insights has unveiled the third annual Insurtech 50 — a list of the 50 most promising private insurtech companies in the world. Highlights from the 2024 cohort include: The 50 winners include 23 tech vendors and 27 insurers and …

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CB Insights has unveiled the third annual Insurtech 50 — a list of the 50 most promising private insurtech companies in the world.

Highlights from the 2024 cohort include:

  • The 50 winners include 23 tech vendors and 27 insurers and intermediaries.
  • $5.6B in equity funding raised over time, including $1B in 2024 so far (as of 8/19/24).
  • Forty percent of winners are early-stage insurtechs addressing everything from wildfire risk to genAI-powered workflow automation.
  • More than a dozen countries represented, spanning Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America.
  • 500+ business relationships since 2020, including with industry leaders like Swiss Re and Tokio Marine.

Our research team picked winning companies based on CB Insights datasets, including deal activity, industry partnerships, team strength, investor strength, patent activity, employee headcount, and proprietary Commercial Maturity and Mosaic scores. We also dug into Analyst Briefings submitted directly to us by startups.

Please click to enlarge.

CB Insights Insurtech 50 map. This map categorizes all winning companies.

CB Insights customers can interact with the entire Insurtech 50 list here and view a detailed category breakdown using the Expert Collection.

2024 INSURTECH 50 COHORT HIGHLIGHTS

Funding and valuations

The cohort has raised $5.6B across 210+ disclosed equity deals to date (as of 8/19/24). Next Insurance and Coalition lead in disclosed equity funding among the cohort ($1.1B and $770M, respectively).

2024 Insurtech 50: Top companies by equity funding

In 2024 so far, this year’s winners have raised $1B across 38 disclosed equity deals. Just 5 deals account for more than half of this funding total:

Altana AI reached a $1B valuation following its Series C round in July 2024. This earned it a spot in the unicorn club alongside the other unicorns in this year’s Insurtech 50 cohort: Accelerant, Coalition, and Next Insurance.

Stage breakdown

Forty percent of this year’s Insurtech 50 winners are early-stage companies (i.e., primarily seed or Series A). These companies are the fastest-growing among those analyzed, with a median 12-month headcount growth rate of 45% — 23 points higher than the median for the rest of the cohort.

Comparatively, 46% of winners are mid-stage (i.e., Series B or C), and 14% are late-stage (i.e., primarily Series D+).

Top investors

MS&AD Ventures has invested in 5 of this year’s winners, leading among venture capital (VC) firms, including corporate venture capital firms. The investor has backed 4 insurance providers — Accelerant, Anzen, Next Insurance, and Wagmo — and 1 tech vendor, Artificial Labs

Following MS&AD Ventures are Felicis, General Catalyst, Nationwide Ventures, and Portage — each of these investors has backed 4 winners.

When it comes to investment activity in 2024, Portage leads in the number of winners backed. So far this year, it has backed 3 insurance providers: CoverTree, Faye, and Hellas Direct.

2024 Insurtech 50: Top 5 venture investors (by disclosed number of winners backed)

Geographic distribution

This year’s Insurtech 50 winners are collectively headquartered across more than a dozen different countries. 

The majority of these companies (30) are based in the United States. Among US metro areas, New York and Silicon Valley lead the pack, as they are both home to 10 of the winners. These metro areas are followed by Boston (4 winners) and Atlanta (2 winners).

The UK follows the US with 8 winners — 6 based in London and 2 near Birmingham.

Headcount growth

Over 7,700 people are employed by the 2024 Insurtech 50 winners, with 4 companies employing about a third of the cohort’s workers: Next Insurance, Coalition, ICEYE, and Cover Genius.

From July 2023 to July 2024, this year’s winners created more than 1,400 jobs. One winner more than tripled its headcount over the period: Sixfold (+267% YoY).

The median 2024 Insurtech 50 winner has raised $0.6M in equity funding per employee. Altana AI and Next Insurance lead among the winners, each having raised $1.6M in equity funding per employee.

2024 Insurtech 50: Top companies by equity funding per employee

Company health

Forty-one of the 50 winners have a CB Insights Mosaic score — a proprietary measure of private company health and growth potential — of at least 700 out of 1,000 (as of 8/26/24). Compared to all private companies — insurtechs or otherwise — with Mosaic scores, these 41 winners rank in the top 3% by Mosaic score.

Next Insurance and Coalition — with Mosaic scores of 898 and 881, respectively — hold the highest scores among this year’s winners.

AI threads the tech vendor landscape

Most of the winning tech vendors offer AI products, which aligns with the broader momentum toward AI (and generative AI) adoption across the insurance industry. Applications often center on prioritization use cases, like risk ranking for underwriters and claims triage for adjusters.

The winners’ business relationships often incorporate the use of AI. Recent examples with industry figures include:

CB Insights Business Relationship Insights: Tokio Marine HCC adopts Akur8's machine learning pricing platform to enhance insurance model efficiency

Insurtech managing general agents (MGAs) gain ground

MGAs — intermediaries with delegated underwriting authority from one or more insurance carriers as well as related entities like managing general underwriters — represent a sizable portion of the 2024 Insurtech 50 list. Their presence reflects broader industry momentum toward the business model.

Notably, most insurtechs within the commercial category are MGAs that offer property & casualty insurance to businesses. Established insurers have made strategic investments in several of these companies, including:

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The P&C claims tech market ranking: Where loss adjustment technology is maturing, emerging, and plateauing https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/property-casualty-claims-tech-market-ranking/ Wed, 21 Aug 2024 21:17:04 +0000 Insurtechs are racing to build leading tech solutions for P&C claims, underscored by a multi-billion-dollar wave of venture funding over the past few years. Across themes like customer experience and genAI, insurance companies must make the right innovation bets to …

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Insurtechs are racing to build leading tech solutions for P&C claims, underscored by a multi-billion-dollar wave of venture funding over the past few years.

Across themes like customer experience and genAI, insurance companies must make the right innovation bets to lower claims costs and stay ahead of the competition.

To help strategy teams prioritize P&C claims markets in their planning decisions, we plotted markets using CB Insights’ TECH framework, which scores markets across 2 dimensions:

Want to see more research? Join a demo of the CB Insights platform.

If you’re already a customer, log in here.

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AI strategies for 8 of the world’s biggest consultancies: Where Accenture, Deloitte, and 6 other giants are making moves https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/ai-strategies-consultancies/ Fri, 16 Aug 2024 20:35:31 +0000 AI has become a crucial focus for many of the world’s leading consulting firms. With the rapid development of generative AI, consultancies are keen to use the tech to streamline internal processes and launch AI-based products for their enterprise clients.  …

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AI has become a crucial focus for many of the world’s leading consulting firms.

With the rapid development of generative AI, consultancies are keen to use the tech to streamline internal processes and launch AI-based products for their enterprise clients. 

Boston Consulting Group, for example, is zeroing in on responsible AI through its partnership with large language model developer Anthropic. Meanwhile, Deloitte’s AI Institute launched an internal generative AI copilot in January 2024 to streamline tasks like coding and project planning, with plans to offer the tool to 100K employees. 

Want to see more research? Join a demo of the CB Insights platform.

If you’re already a customer, log in here.

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State of Climate Tech Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/climate-tech-trends-q2-2024/ Tue, 13 Aug 2024 13:00:11 +0000 Climate tech funding dropped QoQ in Q2’24, reaching its lowest quarterly level since Q2’20. While deal count jumped QoQ, it still remained well below 2023’s quarterly totals. Amid the funding decline, investors are favoring smaller mid- and late-stage deals. However, …

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Climate tech funding dropped QoQ in Q2’24, reaching its lowest quarterly level since Q2’20. While deal count jumped QoQ, it still remained well below 2023’s quarterly totals.

Amid the funding decline, investors are favoring smaller mid- and late-stage deals. However, they are still willing to place early-stage bets where they see strong opportunities.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF Climate tech Q2’24 REPORT

Get 137+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in climate tech.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of climate tech:

    • Global climate tech funding declines by 20% QoQ to $4.9B in Q2’24 — the lowest quarterly total since Q2’20. While deal count rebounded QoQ to 397 in Q2, it still came in well below 2023’s quarterly totals.

Climate tech funding drops to its lowest level since Q2'20

    • Climate tech doesn’t see any unicorn births (private companies reaching $1B+ valuations) in Q2’24, marking climate tech’s second straight quarter without any new unicorns. This coincides with a decline in late-stage deal sizes — the median deal size at that stage is $38M in 2024 YTD, down 16% vs. full-year 2023.

Climate tech doesn't see any new unicorns in Q2'24

    • Late-stage deal sizes decline, while early-stage sizes show strength. The median late-stage deal size is $38M in 2024 YTD — down 16% from full-year 2023. In contrast, median early-stage size is up 39% YTD, suggesting that investors are still willing to place bets where they see strong early-stage opportunities. Two of the largest early-stage deals in Q2’24 went to Cylib and Aether Fuels. Both companies intend to use the funding to scale and support commercialization initiatives — goals that are generally communicated by later-stage companies.

Median early-stage deal size rises, mid- and late-stage sizes decline

    • $100M+ mega-rounds continue to trend down in Q2’24. Climate tech mega-rounds dropped from 17 in Q1’24 to 9 in Q2’24. The majority of Q2’24’s mega-round recipients are focused on scaling operations and achieving full-scale commercialization. For example, one of the quarter’s largest deals ($375M Series G) went to battery materials developer Sila, which plans to use the funding to ramp up silicon anode production.

Climate tech standouts are using mega-round funding for scaling and commercialization efforts
Source: CB Insights — Sila Funding Insights

  • Climate tech funding drops yet again in Asia. Climate tech startups in the region raised a total of $0.4B in Q2’24, down 33% QoQ and 89% YoY. China suffered the sharpest funding decline (-90% QoQ) among highlighted countries in the region. India and Japan watched funding fall by 28% and 57% QoQ, respectively.

More energy resources from CB insights

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Big Tech in Fintech: How Amazon and Google are battling to own transactions https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/big-tech-fintech-amazon-google/ Thu, 08 Aug 2024 20:35:09 +0000 Big tech won’t be your next bank — but they’ll play a part in many of your transactions. After nearly a decade of big tech companies venturing into launching their own financial products, the major players have now pulled back. …

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Big tech won’t be your next bank — but they’ll play a part in many of your transactions.

After nearly a decade of big tech companies venturing into launching their own financial products, the major players have now pulled back. Most have shifted to roles as tech providers, broadly supporting advances in financial infrastructure.

Amazon and Google stand out in this area:

  • Amazon is embedding itself in more financial transactions via partnerships, investments, and acquisitions. It’s using these relationships to reach customers across more geographies and a wider range of services. 
  • Google has shifted away from providing financial services and instead is connecting its existing platforms to others’ financial offerings. The company is also investing and partnering to enable digital-first financial tools.

We mined CB Insights data on Amazon’s and Google’s investments, acquisitions, and partnerships, as well as patents and earnings transcripts, from January 2021 to July 2024 to explore how the companies are reengineering their fintech strategies.

Download the full report to see where they are making moves.

BIG TECH IN FINTECH

See where Amazon and Google are making moves in financial services — and where they’ll go next.

This report uses CB Insights datasets like investments, acquisitions, business relationships, earnings call insights, patents, and more. Learn more about our data here.

Big Tech in Fintech

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State of Insurtech Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/insurtech-trends-q2-2024/ Tue, 06 Aug 2024 13:00:59 +0000 Global insurtech funding increased 44% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $1.3B in Q2’24 — outpacing the quarterly growth seen across the broader venture and fintech landscapes. We provide a deep dive on the state of insurtech in the full report. Here’s the …

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Global insurtech funding increased 44% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $1.3B in Q2’24 — outpacing the quarterly growth seen across the broader venture and fintech landscapes.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF INSURTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 70+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in insurtech.

We provide a deep dive on the state of insurtech in the full report. Here’s the TL;DR:

  • Global insurtech funding increases to $1.3B in Q2’24 — the highest level since Q1’23. Insurtech funding grew 44% QoQ — led by 50% growth in funding to P&C insurtechs, from $0.6B to $0.9B. Funding to life & health (L&H) insurtechs also increased QoQ, ticking up from $0.3B to $0.4B.

Global insurtech funding reaches a 5-quarter high in Q2'24

  • Insurtech deal count falls 27% QoQ to 82, the lowest level since 2016. The drop was nearly proportional across P&C and L&H: P&C deals fell 28% to 54 deals, while L&H deals decreased by 26% to 28 deals. On a percentage basis, the decline in insurtech deals outpaced the broader venture and fintech environments (where deal activity fell 7% and 16% QoQ, respectively).

Insurtech deal count falls to an 8-year low in Q2'24

  • Median insurtech deal size increases 25% from $4M in 2023 to $5M in 2024 YTD. Only 2021 has seen a higher median deal size over the past 10 years. However, while the median early-stage insurtech deal size is at a record-high $4M this year, late-stage deal size ($31M) is the lowest it’s been since 2018. Insurtech mega-rounds (deals worth $100M+) were nearly nonexistent in Q2, with Sidecar Health, a health insurer, raising the quarter’s only such deal (a $165M Series D).

Median insurtech deal size increases 25% in 2024 YTD

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF INSURTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 70+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in insurtech.

  • Insurtech sees its first IPOs since Q3’22. Two insurtechs IPO’d in Q2’24 — Digit Insurance, an India-based insurance provider, and Saudi Arabia-based Rasan, which primarily focuses on auto insurance sales and vehicle services. Both IPOs occurred amid a broader lull in global IPO activity.

Insurtech sees first IPOs in nearly 2 years

  • Europe’s share of insurtech deals reaches 35% — a record high. Deals to Europe-based insurtechs stayed roughly steady, ticking up from 28 in Q1’24 to 29 in Q2’24. Comparatively, the US saw insurtech deal count fall from 61 to 40. Funding to Europe-based insurtechs reached a 7-quarter high ($0.5B), driven by two $93M deals for Finland-based ICEYE — a provider of data from satellite imagery — and UK-based Vitesse, a claims payments processor.

Europe sees record-high insurtech deal share in Q2'24

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Future of the workforce: How AI agents will transform enterprise workflows https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/future-workforce-ai-agents/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 20:35:51 +0000 Prefer to listen in? Check out our discussion of the report here:  An empowered digital workforce would reshape industries as we know them. The implications would be enormous, changing how companies hire and scale, as well as what they can …

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Prefer to listen in? Check out our discussion of the report here: 


An empowered digital workforce would reshape industries as we know them. The implications would be enormous, changing how companies hire and scale, as well as what they can achieve with a small headcount. 

That future isn’t too far off. 

The idea of autonomous AI agents — LLM-powered bots that can independently reason and execute tasks — caught on like wildfire in 2023, marking an important evolution beyond chatbots and copilots. 

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has described agents as “AI’s killer function” as recently as May 2024.  

While much of the tech remains limited in its ability to execute tasks reliably, use cases are gaining traction in horizontal enterprise applications like customer support, sales, and engineering.

We mined CB Insights startup, financing, business model, and buyer interview data to map the evolving landscape and analyze its future. 

In the 28-page report, we cover: 

  • The state of AI agents: Investment is surging to companies in the space, but limitations — most notably, agent reliability — remain. 
  • Leading horizontal applications and impacts: The landscape of VC-backed agent startups is dominated by a focus on horizontal applications — across sales, customer support, and other enterprise and general productivity workflows.
  • Emerging industry applications and opportunities: While few agentic companies focus on single industries, companies are emerging to target workflows across financial services, industrials, and more. 

Download the full report to get all of the data and analysis.

THE FUTURE OF THE WORKFORCE

Get the free report to see how AI agents are tackling enterprise workflows across industries.

AI agents tackling the future of enterprise workflows

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State of CVC Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/corporate-venture-capital-trends-q2-2024/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 13:00:55 +0000 In Q2’24, funding with participation from corporate venture capital (CVC) outfits grew for the second straight quarter, ticking up from $15.4B to $15.6B, while deals fell 12% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 782 — their lowest total since Q1’18. Massive rounds to …

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In Q2’24, funding with participation from corporate venture capital (CVC) outfits grew for the second straight quarter, ticking up from $15.4B to $15.6B, while deals fell 12% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 782 — their lowest total since Q1’18.

Massive rounds to AI companies were a key driver of the funding growth, with 3 of the 5 largest CVC-backed deals this quarter going to AI infrastructure players Scale ($1B), Mistral AI ($502M), and Cohere ($450M).

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF CVC Q2’24 REPORT

Get 120+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest trends in corporate venture capital.

Based on our 124-page report, here is the TL;DR on the state of CVC:

  • ​​Global CVC-backed funding climbs to $15.6B in Q2’24. Over half ($8.4B) of this funding came from $100M+ mega-rounds. Meanwhile, global deal volume declined by 12% QoQ to 782. This drop was particularly pronounced in Asia, which saw a 24% drop in deals QoQ.
  • This year, the average CVC-backed deal size is $26.6M, up 27% from $20.9M in full-year 2023. The increase is due in part to billion-dollar deals to startups like Scale ($1B Series F, backed by the CVC arms of Intel, AMD, Cisco, and ServiceNow) and Wiz ($1B Series E, backed by Salesforce Ventures).
  • CVC-backed funding to digital health startups falls 57% QoQ to 0.6B, its lowest point since Q4’17. Retail tech and fintech saw similar decreases, with funding down 52% and 8% QoQ, respectively. Companies not explicitly focused on AI face challenges raising funds in the weakened venture market.

  • Quarterly CVC-backed funding in China slips to $0.2B, a 60% QoQ decrease. Deal volume also fell 24% QoQ to 59, its lowest level since 2015. China’s tech market has faced significant challenges, including rising macroeconomic concerns, escalating geopolitical tensions, and a strict regulatory environment.

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State of AI Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/ai-trends-q2-2024/ Tue, 30 Jul 2024 18:00:55 +0000 Global AI funding climbed once again in Q2’24, jumping 59% QoQ to hit $23.2B — the highest quarterly level on record. Massive rounds to a handful of startups, including Elon Musk’s xAI, were key drivers behind the jump, which outpaced …

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Global AI funding climbed once again in Q2’24, jumping 59% QoQ to hit $23.2B — the highest quarterly level on record. Massive rounds to a handful of startups, including Elon Musk’s xAI, were key drivers behind the jump, which outpaced the growth in broader venture funding (+8% QoQ).

Meanwhile, overall AI deal volume broke its extended freefall in Q2’24, rising by 16% QoQ to reach 948. This bucked the trend in venture deals more broadly (-7% QoQ).

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of AI:

  • Global AI funding increases 59% QoQ to $23.2B in Q2’24 — the highest quarterly level on record, exceeding even the level seen during 2021’s venture boom. The jump was driven by a handful of $1B+ rounds and outpaced the growth in broader venture funding (+8%). Meanwhile, AI deal count climbed by 16% QoQ to reach 948, bucking the trend in venture deals more broadly (-7% QoQ).

Global AI funding hits a record high, while deal volume rebounds

  • Average AI deal size is $28.9M in 2024 so far — up 55% vs. $18.6M in full-year 2023. A relatively small number of players have had an outsized impact on this upward trend, raising massive $1B+ deals in Q2’24: 
    • xAI — $6B Series B at a $24B valuation
    • G42 — $1.5B investment from Microsoft 
    • CoreWeave — $1.1B Series C at a $19B valuation
    • Wayve — $1.05B Series C from Softbank, Microsoft, and Nvidia
    • Scale — $1B Series F at a $13.8B valuation

Meanwhile, the median AI deal size is up 25% in 2024 so far.

Average AI deal size is elevated in 2024 so far

  • AI unicorn births remain steady at 6 QoQ in Q2’24. Generative AI was a key theme for new unicorns (private companies reaching $1B+ valuations). Some of these companies, like xAI, are focused on generative AI infrastructure. Others are primarily working on generative AI applications, like Perplexity (search) and Cognition (coding).

Among new AI unicorns in Q2’24, xAI landed the most sizable valuation. The company was valued at $24B after raising $6B in Series B funding, which it plans to use to bring its first products to market.

Elon Musk's xAI enters unicorn club with a $24B valuation

  • AI companies raise 32 mega-rounds (deals worth $100M+) in Q2’24, marking a 28% increase QoQ. Meanwhile, funding from AI mega-round deals climbed 74% QoQ in Q2’24. This was largely driven by US mega-round deals, which collectively amounted to $10.8B — 67% of AI mega-round funding in Q2.
  • Among major global regions, the US continues to lead in AI funding and deals. AI startups based in the US drew $15.2B across 476 deals in Q2’24. This equates to 66% of the global AI funding total and 50% of the global deal total in Q2.

The US continues to lead in AI funding and deals in Q2'24

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State of Digital Health Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/digital-health-trends-q2-2024/ Thu, 18 Jul 2024 13:00:37 +0000 Investor dollars in digital health slowed in Q2’24, while deal volume dropped to its lowest quarterly level since 2014. Amid the decline, investors have shifted their focus to writing fewer, larger checks for more mature companies in the digital health …

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Investor dollars in digital health slowed in Q2’24, while deal volume dropped to its lowest quarterly level since 2014.

Amid the decline, investors have shifted their focus to writing fewer, larger checks for more mature companies in the digital health ecosystem. Meanwhile, their interest in early-stage companies has cooled.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of digital health:

  • Global digital health funding declines by 26% QoQ, with funding falling to $2.9B across 235 deals in Q2’24 — the lowest quarterly deal volume seen since 2014. However, the annual average deal size globally is $16.7M in 2024 YTD, up 40% from the average for full-year 2023, signaling that investors are writing fewer but larger checks.

  • US deal share grows to 61%, up from 54% in Q1’24. While digital health funding in the US declined by 18% QoQ in Q2’24, the US’ proportion of the global deal volume grew, marked by an increase in mid- to late-stage deal share. Median deal size is also up in the US in 2024 so far — sitting at $7.5M vs. $4.6M in full-year 2023.

  • Mid-stage deal share jumps to 26% in 2024 YTD, while early-stage deal share falls by 14 percentage points. Early-stage deals have consistently accounted for 60%+ of all digital health deals in recent years. However, in 2024 YTD, early-stage deal share has dropped to 51% as mid- and late-stage deals have captured more investor interest. In the US, early-stage deal share has fallen to 45% in 2024 YTD vs. 62% in full-year 2023.

  • $100M+ mega-rounds drop off in Q2’24 but are more varied across the digital health landscape. Digital health mega-rounds dropped from 8 in Q1’24 to 5 in Q2’24. While mega-rounds were focused on biotech in Q1’24, they were more spread out in Q2’24, spanning areas like care navigation, ultrasound tech, and value-based care tools. The largest deal of the quarter ($200M Series D) went to Foodsmart — a telenutrition company focused on chronic disease management.

Source: CB Insights — Foodsmart Funding Insights

  • Digital health exits increase in Q2’24, rising from 26 to 32 QoQ. AI-driven platforms were the highlight here, with Tempus (precision medicine) and XtalPi (drug R&D) going public via IPO and Nuvo Group (remote pregnancy monitoring) going public via SPAC. Digital health M&A exit activity also picked up in Q2’24, especially in Europe, which saw M&A deals jump from 5 to 10 QoQ. Globally, virtual care, provider workflow tools, and drug R&D platforms were key categories for M&A in Q2’24.

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State of Fintech Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q2-2024/ Tue, 16 Jul 2024 13:00:48 +0000 On the surface, Q2’24 was a return to growth for fintech, with funding increasing 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $8.9B. However, two huge deals — for market intelligence firm AlphaSense and payments juggernaut Stripe — obscured the reality that it was …

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On the surface, Q2’24 was a return to growth for fintech, with funding increasing 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $8.9B.

However, two huge deals — for market intelligence firm AlphaSense and payments juggernaut Stripe obscured the reality that it was another tepid quarter for the sector as a whole.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of fintech:

  • Funding increases by 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ), buoyed by 2 blockbuster deals. Quarterly funding rose in Q2’24 to $8.9B. But if it weren’t for 2 late-stage deals for Stripe ($694M) and AlphaSense ($650M), funding would have remained flat QoQ. A 16% decline in deal volume also indicates fintech investors remain cautious.​Q2'24 fintech funding gets a boost from 2 $650M+ deals
  • Average deal size decreases to $12.8M, down 4% vs. 2023. The slight decline in average deal size YTD highlights broad stagnation in fintech deal sizes. Yet, when looking at the median, deal size has ticked up from $3.1M in 2023 to $4M this year. The 29% increase could signal strength in the long tail of smaller fintech deals.
  • Mid- and late-stage deal share is at 20% YTD, up from 18% in 2023. In a more favorable operating environment, investors are showing greater confidence in later-stage companies than they did in the past 2 years — especially in areas like payments and lending. In payments, mid- and late-stage rounds make up 27% of deals YTD, vs. 21% in 2023. In digital lending, mid- and late-stage deals make up 35% of deals YTD, compared to 20% in 2023. 
  • 30% of the biggest early-stage deals are for digital asset companies. Crypto and blockchain-focused fintechs are receiving renewed focus, as the crypto winter thaws. Digital asset companies accounted for nearly one-third of the top 10 seed/angel and top 10 Series A rounds. The two largest early-stage deals in the crypto space went to digital asset infrastructure platforms TradeDog ($75M seed) and Biton ($44M Series A). Crypto winter thawing for early-stage companies
  • US-based funding increases by 45% QoQ to $4.8B. In addition to the funding increase, the US led the world across a few metrics in Q2’24, including share of equity deals (40%) and exits (36%). Mega-rounds led the way: Nine of the 10 biggest deals in the US were worth $100M or more, the most since Q2’22. LatAm was the only other major global region with a funding increase, up by 22% to $442M.Mega-rounds drive growth for US in Q2'24

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

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The embedded finance market ranking: Where integrated financial services are maturing, emerging, and plateauing https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/embedded-finance-market-ranking/ Fri, 12 Jul 2024 18:22:03 +0000 Increasingly, consumers and businesses alike expect transactions to be fully digital and frictionless. To meet this demand, businesses across industries are embedding financial tools — from buy now, pay later (BNPL) to insurance distribution — into their platforms. Integrating these …

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Increasingly, consumers and businesses alike expect transactions to be fully digital and frictionless.

To meet this demand, businesses across industries are embedding financial tools — from buy now, pay later (BNPL) to insurance distribution — into their platforms. Integrating these financial services can help not only improve customer engagement, but also drive new revenue streams and loyalty in the process. 

To help strategy teams prioritize embedded finance markets in their planning decisions, we plotted markets using CB Insights’ TECH framework, which scores markets across 2 dimensions:

Want to see more research? Join a demo of the CB Insights platform.

If you’re already a customer, log in here.

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State of Venture Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/venture-trends-q2-2024/ Wed, 03 Jul 2024 13:00:47 +0000 Even as investors remain highly selective with their dealmaking, they’re reserving their dry powder for fewer, bigger deals in areas with strong growth potential like AI. Based on our deep dive below, here is the TL;DR on the state of …

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Even as investors remain highly selective with their dealmaking, they’re reserving their dry powder for fewer, bigger deals in areas with strong growth potential like AI.

Based on our deep dive below, here is the TL;DR on the state of venture:

  1. Venture funding climbs for a second straight quarter, reaching $65.7B, up 8% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ). However, while funding gained momentum, deals slid for the ninth quarter in a row to 6,230. Global deal volume is now less than half of what it was at its peak in Q1’22.
  2. At $14.4M, the average deal size is up 17% this year so far vs. 2023. Even in a more cautious investing environment, the deals that do happen have ballooned in size as investors put more behind select startups. 
  3. AI startups are dominating global funding, capturing 35% in Q2’24. This is the highest quarterly share on record. AI startups drew $23.2B in Q2’24 — up 59% QoQ — driven by mammoth $1B+ deals to Elon Musk’s xAI as well as Scale, CoreWeave, and others. 
  4. The US is attracting a greater portion of exit activity, with exit share rising 4 percentage points QoQ to 39%. This represents its highest share in 2 years. Top US-based exits in Q2’24 included IPOs from Tempus and Rubrik — both valued at over $5B — as well as Hyundai’s acquisition of Motional priced at $4.1B.
  5. SOSV is the most active venture investor, backing 35 companies in Q2’24. It’s followed by Andreessen Horowitz (33 companies), General Catalyst (31 companies), and Lightspeed Venture Partners (28).
  6. Fintech funding rebounds 19% QoQ to hit $8.9B — a 5-quarter high — led by $600M+ rounds to Stripe and AlphaSense. But it was a different story for the retail tech and digital health sectors: retail tech funding was stagnant from Q1 to Q2, while digital health funding slipped by 26%.
  7. Quarterly funding to startups in Asia falls below $10B for the first time since 2014. The drop was especially severe in China, where some international investors have pulled back or retreated altogether amid rising geopolitical tensions. Meanwhile, the US and Europe — the two largest regions for venture investment — each saw funding grow by double-digit percentages in Q2’24.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF VENTURE Q2’24 REPORT

Get 205+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest trends in venture capital.

Venture funding keeps climbing, while deal volume falls

Venture funding ticked up for a second consecutive quarter, reaching $65.7B in Q2’24. Nearly half of this funding (47%) came from mega-rounds (deals worth $100M+). xAI’s $6B round alone represented nearly one-tenth of the global total and helped prevent funding from declining QoQ.

Despite the strong showing, deal volume slipped for a ninth straight quarter — sinking 7% to 6,230 — as investors remain cautious in the less exuberant market. The US, Europe, and Asia all saw deal count decrease QoQ, while it grew slightly across Canada, LatAm, Africa, and Oceania.


Deal sizes are growing again

With deals down and funding up, the average deal size has climbed this year, pacing at $14.4M — up 17% compared to full-year 2023. Notably, it’s not just a few massive deals that are pulling that figure up: the median deal size has also grown from $2.5M to $3M over the same period. 

Among investment stages, the median deal size has increased across early- and mid-stage rounds, while it has fallen slightly at the late stage.


AI startups grab a record 35% of all venture funding in Q2

One factor more than any other is driving gains in the venture market right now, and that’s AI. Startups developing AI solutions raised $23.2B in Q2’24 — accounting for 35% of the global total, the highest share ever recorded. This share has been trending up for several years now, especially since the arrival of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in late 2022.

Leading the pack among AI startups, Elon Musk’s xAI outfit raised a whopping $6B round in Q2’24. The 1-year-old company, now valued at $24B, had no trouble finding investors, who believe xAI will gain a competitive edge through integration with Musk’s network of companies (and their data). For instance, Tesla could use xAI’s latest multimodal AI model, which includes vision capabilities, to bring more advanced perception to its Optimus humanoid.

Funding Insights from xAI's CB Insights profile

The Funding Insights from xAI’s CB Insights profile point to synergies between xAI and Musk’s other companies, like Tesla.

Other top AI rounds in Q2’24 went to:

  • G42 — $1.5B investment from Microsoft
  • CoreWeave — $1.1B Series C at a $19B valuation
  • Wayve — $1.05B Series C from SoftBank, Nvidia, and Microsoft
  • Scale — $1B Series F led by Accel, with backing from corporates including AMD, Amazon, Intel, and Nvidia

Customers can explore thousands of AI startups across industries and technologies in the CB Insights AI Expert Collection.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF VENTURE Q2’24 REPORT

Get 205+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest trends in venture capital.


The US gains share of exits in Q2, rivaling Europe

In Q2’24, the US saw 39% of all exits, which included both IPOs and M&A transactions. The figure represents an increase of 4 percentage points QoQ and puts the US in the No. 1 spot globally, tied with Europe.

Notably, US IPOs are gaining some strength, with Q2 seeing blockbuster debuts from Tempus (valued at $6.1B) and Rubrik ($5.6B). We predicted both companies would go public in our Tech IPO Pipeline report, published in late 2023. 

Go deeper with CB Insights buyer interviews for Tempus and Rubrik to see what their customers are saying.

Meanwhile, the US venture market’s top M&A deal went to Motional, an autonomous driving startup founded as a joint venture between Hyundai and Aptiv. Hyundai took a majority stake in the company at a $4.1B valuation. Per the Funding Insights on Motional’s CB Insights profile, Hyundai and Motional are co-developing a robotaxi service with a target release of 2024.

Funding Insights from Motional's CB Insights profile

The Acquisition Insights from Hyundai’s CB Insights profile break down the structure and goals of the Motional deal.


SOSV tops the list of most active investors

Around the world, the most active venture investor right now is SOSV. The firm, which primarily backs early-stage startups, invested in 35 unique companies in Q2’24, placing it ahead of a16z (33 companies), General Catalyst (31), and Lightspeed (28). 

Customers can use this CB Insights platform search to see SOSV’s top portfolio companies ranked by Mosaic score — which measures a private company’s health — alongside data cuts like commercial maturity, headcount growth, and more.


Fintech sees funding grow faster than other sectors

Among industry sectors, fintech saw funding grow the most, watching it rise 19% QoQ to reach $8.9B. This marks a rebound for the sector vs. Q1’24. Top fintech deals in the quarter went to payments leader Stripe and market intelligence firm AlphaSense

The retail tech and digital health sectors were worse off than fintech. Retail tech funding was roughly stagnant QoQ, while digital health funding plummeted to below $3B — its second-lowest quarterly level since 2016.


Funding slides in Asia, while it grows in the US & Europe

Among major global regions, the US and Europe outpaced the market as a whole for funding growth in Q2’24. 

Asia, on the other hand, saw its funding fall 13% QoQ to $9.7B. The decline was most pronounced in China, where dollars tumbled more than 50% to $2.2B, whereas India, Singapore, and Japan all experienced funding growth QoQ. 

The top two equity deals in the region went to United Arab Emirates’ G42 and India-based Zepto.

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The Enterprise AI Roadmap: How the AI development platform landscape has transformed, changing how buyers assess ROI, use cases, and more https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/enterprise-ai-roadmap/ Fri, 21 Jun 2024 20:40:30 +0000 Generative AI has marked a new era in AI development.  Increasingly sophisticated models are opening up new applications that enterprises are eager to harness.  AI development platforms — which enable enterprises to manage the AI lifecycle, from data preparation to …

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Generative AI has marked a new era in AI development. 

Increasingly sophisticated models are opening up new applications that enterprises are eager to harness. 

AI development platforms — which enable enterprises to manage the AI lifecycle, from data preparation to model deployment and continuous monitoring — are responding to the call.

These one-stop shop platforms, from enterprise machine learning (ML) players (Dataiku, H2O.ai) to big tech products (Google Cloud Vertex AI, Amazon SageMaker and Bedrock), are jumping on the opportunity to adapt their offerings for the genAI era and capture more enterprise AI spend.

We mined CB Insights valuation, headcount, and financing data, as well as 50+ buyer interviews, to map the evolving landscape and analyze its future. 

In the 32-page report, we cover: 

  • The AI development platform market landscape: GenAI is putting pressure on legacy ML companies while new players muscle in.
  • How enterprise buyers are evaluating the ROI of their AI tool spend: Productivity gains and cost savings are in focus. 
  • The future of enterprise AI development: From small language models to big tech’s advantages in the landscape, we cover the opportunities and challenges both enterprises and vendors face.
  • Sample buyer case studies by industry: How buyers including Fortune 500 companies are leveraging AI across financial services, manufacturing, and healthcare. 

Download the full report to get all of the data.

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Big Tech in Healthcare: How Amazon, Google, Microsoft, & Nvidia are looking to transform drug R&D, primary care, and more https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/big-tech-healthcare-amazon-google-microsoft-nvidia/ Wed, 12 Jun 2024 18:49:45 +0000 The $11T+ healthcare industry presents a host of opportunities and challenges for big tech players, from the chance to capture an abundance of consumer data to the pressure to address digitization and connectivity. These leaders are harnessing their existing offerings …

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The $11T+ healthcare industry presents a host of opportunities and challenges for big tech players, from the chance to capture an abundance of consumer data to the pressure to address digitization and connectivity.

These leaders are harnessing their existing offerings — in areas like cloud computing, AI, and hardware — to service healthcare providers and pharmaceutical companies.

While big tech players are competing with each other in this landscape, they are also carving out distinct strategies: 

  • Amazon is going deeper into primary and specialized care.
  • Google is amassing troves of health data, which could play a role in its biotech bets. 
  • Microsoft is equipping healthcare organizations with AI tools to improve clinical research, drug R&D, and care delivery.
  • Nvidia’s long-standing hardware dominance positions it to play a major role in the future of smart hospitals. 

This report uses CB Insights datasets like investments, acquisitions, business relationships, patents, buyer interviews, company scouting reports, and more. Learn more about our data here.

CB Insights Big Tech in Healthcare: June 2024

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