Insider Brief
- Despite a challenging market, AI continues to attract substantial capital, driving much of the current venture activity.
- While the broader innovation economy is struggling, AI accounts for 28% of deals and 48% of capital raised in 2024.
- The innovation economy is undergoing a recovery and recalibration, with AI leading the charge amidst tougher economic conditions.
Don’t call it a slow down. (Call it a recalibration.)
As the innovation economy undergoes a significant shift in investment priorities, one sector remains a magnet for investment: artificial intelligence (AI). Despite a challenging macroeconomic environment and tighter venture capital (VC) funding, AI continues to attract substantial capital, according to the “State of the Markets H2 2024” report by Silicon Valley Bank.
The following are some key points from the report.
AI: The Bright Spot in a Tough Market
AI has emerged as a key driver of the current venture capital landscape. While overall US venture investment has halved compared to its 2021 peak, it still surpasses the investment levels seen in 26 of the last 30 years. This is largely thanks to the ongoing boom in AI, which has led to increased valuations and deal sizes in the sector, despite a broader slowdown in tech funding.
“While many companies are finding it harder to raise, the best are making it happen — led by those capitalizing on the boom in AI,” the report notes.
This surge in AI investment has provided a lifeline to the innovation economy, which has otherwise seen companies prioritizing margins over growth due to a tougher economic environment.
Venture Capital’s AI Focus
Venture capitalists are increasingly focused on AI, with many viewing it as a seismic shift comparable to the industrial revolution or the rise of the internet.
According to Marc Cadieux, President of SVB Commercial Bank, and Mark Gallagher, Head of Investor Coverage, both authors of the report, “Most investors are laser-focused on the promise of generative AI — comparing the present moment to the dawn of the industrial revolution, the invention of the internet, or the rise of mobile — all seismic shifts.”
This conviction is reflected in the data. The report highlights that AI has accounted for 28% of deals and 48% of capital raised in 2024, underscoring the industry’s outsized impact on the current venture landscape.
The Recalibration of the Innovation Economy
The broader innovation economy is undergoing what the report describes as a period of “recovery and recalibration.” While there is evidence of recovery, especially in AI-driven sectors, other areas of the market are struggling. Seed-stage startups, in particular, are facing a “Series A crunch,” as many have yet to secure follow-on funding, creating a bottleneck in the pipeline.
This recalibration is partly a response to the end of the zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP) and a more stringent fundraising environment, which have exposed companies that were overly reliant on growth without strong underlying business fundamentals. As the report states, “Excluding AI, growth remains a challenge to many companies.”
Future Outlook
Looking ahead, the report suggests that the second half of 2024 may bring further recovery, driven by anticipated interest rate cuts and increased political clarity following the US election season. These changes are expected to “grease the flywheel of innovation,” potentially revitalizing IPO markets and spurring further investment and fundraising.
However, the outlook remains cautious. While AI continues to draw significant investment, the broader innovation economy is likely to see a more measured pace of growth. As the report concludes, “Innovation remains unstoppable,” but the path forward will require a careful balancing act between growth and sustainability.