New Yorkers are used to being at the center of the action. From finance to media to advertising to fashion, theirs is the city where trends get set and big deals get made.
In the tech and venture capital world, however, not so much. While New York is certainly no slouch in technology or startup generation, it’s not the epicenter of that scene. The most valuable U.S. tech companies are on the opposite coast, and Northern California historically gobbles up the lion’s share of venture funding.
Subscribe to the Crunchbase Daily
Recent funding data shows New York is catching up, though. So far this year, New York companies have pulled in $7.6 billion in seed through late-stage venture funding. If investment continues at this pace, the city will be on track for a record-setting year.
“It doesn’t surprise me that we’re on pace to do more,” said Cynthia Franklin, the director of entrepreneurship for the Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship at NYU’s Stern School of Business. “Despite the fact that 2020 was such a strange year, there have been several sectors that have been doing quite well.”
While the pandemic had a devastating impact on many small New York businesses, technology startups in a number of sectors — such as fintech, e-commerce, gaming and telemedicine — saw sharp growth in demand, Franklin notes. In essence, shifts in consumer and business behavior that were already underway accelerated during the past year.
Cash-flush venture funds have been pouring more money into local companies in these spaces too, with a sharp rise in large rounds this year. For a multiyear perspective, we lay out New York funding totals for 2021 and the past five calendar years in the chart below:
As you can see, the 2021 funding spike is a sharp contrast to other recent years. For 2018 to 2020, annual investment ranged from $15.5 billion to $17.2 billion — big sums, but not a huge year to year fluctuation in funding.
But as more nations emerge from the pandemic lately, unbridled optimism is widespread in the venture space. This past December, January and February have been the three peak funding months of the past two years.
Rounds are getting bigger, exits too
New York is part of this bullish trend. So far this year, at least 25 New York-headquartered companies have raised venture or growth rounds of $100 million and up (see list).
At least five NYC companies, meanwhile, pulled in $300 million or more in 2021, as we highlight in the chart below:
In addition to big rounds, we’re also seeing big exits for NYC-headquartered companies. DigitalOcean, provider of a cloud computing platform for small and medium-sized businesses, made its market debut Wednesday, securing a valuation around $4.4 billion. A few weeks earlier, insurance provider Oscar Health went public as well, and was recently valued at around $5.4 billion.
Probably the biggest is yet to come — robotic process automation software giant UiPath confidentially filed to go public in December. The company raised a $750 million pre-IPO round in February at a $35 billion valuation.
Another big one waiting in the wings is Compass. The venture-backed real estate brokerage is aiming for a $10 billion valuation in its upcoming New York Stock Exchange listing.
NYC startups thrive across industries, spread locations
As we look at funding more broadly, New York stands out as one of the more diversified startup ecosystems, with a large presence spanning fintech, digital media, consumer, real estate, enterprise software, health and, increasingly, biotech. In short, it seems pretty much anything that doesn’t require a giant manufacturing facility can scale up there.
That diversification is observable across stages. And while we’ve been focusing so far on later-stage rounds, it’s worth noting that New York’s early-stage and seed funding activity has also held up at healthy levels in 2021.
So far this year, investors have put roughly $200 million into reported seed-stage deals, and $1.5 billion into early-stage rounds (Series A and B), per Crunchbase data. Businesses securing larger early-stage rounds run the gamut from natural language processing to blockchain infrastructure to smart dog collars.
Now, as we’ve noted before, headquarters don’t always translate into headcount. Growth-stage companies in particular are commonly based in one city, but have their staff spread out across the country or the globe. This is the case for UiPath, Ro, Compass, Squarespace and others. (Plus, of course, this past year workers who can telecommute have largely been doing so.)
Still, headquarters location matters. By and large, New York-based companies will have their executive team in the city, maintain office space, host events locally, and draw on the area’s considerable talent pool to fill core positions.
Where to go from here
As funding for New York startups continues to rise, it’s hard to envision what might slow things down beyond a broader nationwide or global contraction in investment.
After all, when it comes to tech and entrepreneurial hubs, New York has the usual required elements: A huge and diverse population of skilled workers, leadership in a broad array of industries, several prominent research universities, and easy access to capital.
Plus, as we mentioned before, New Yorkers are used to their city taking a lead role in emerging industries. For tech, perhaps it’s only a matter of time.
Illustration: Dom Guzman
Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the Crunchbase Daily.
67.1K Followers