Despite the fall in venture capital funding, the underlying trend was more positive.Venture capital funding to technology companies across the island of Ireland fell by just over 40% in the first quarter of 2019 according to the
Irish Venture Capital Association (IVCA) VenturePulse survey.
Compared to the same period last year, the survey published on Thursday (May 23) in association with William Fry, found that venture capital funding fell from €332m to €196.8m.
Last year's figures, however, included two huge deals of €100m each for Intercom and AMCS and IVCA chairman Alex Hobbs said that the underlying trend was more positive.
“Last year included two megadeals of €100m each for Intercom and AMCS," said Hobbs. "If you strip these out, then core growth across all deals in the first quarter was almost 50%.”
He said that activity in the market is reflected in the fact that 75 Irish companies received start up or following on funding compared to 43 in the same quarter last year.
Sarah-Jane Larkin, director general, IVCA, said that there was a strong rebound in seed funding to early stage firms, up 23% to €17.8m.
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HBAN plans to provide €15m start-up funding by recruiting 75 new angel investorsShe added that there was also an increase in the number of smaller deal sizes in the €1m-€5m category which increased to 66 from 36 in the same quarter last year.
Life sciences and software dominated the overall figures with 47% and 33% of funds raised respectively. All five investments that exceeded €10m were in the life sciences sector. AI (Artificial Intelligence) & machine learning received 3%.
“Despite the overall fall in funding, the Irish venture capital community continues to be the main source of investment for Irish innovative SMEs," said Larkin.
"Both through direct investment and as the local lead investor for international syndicate investors who invested €112m or 57% of total funds raised in the first quarter of 2019.”
Source: Written based on press release
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