Cooley is one of the top law firms representing startups, and so they have data that no one else quite has.  They know exactly what venture deals are priced at, exactly how many are happening, and exactly what is happening across 100s and 100s of leading startups.

Other data sources are great, but law firms have a unique access to the exact, real data.  Everyone else is scanning public filings and making some educated guesses.

And what Cooley has seen for later-stage VC rounds is pretty brutal.  More brutal than I thought, in fact.  You can see the simply massive decline in the total amounts of VC capital raised this year here:


A few specific learnings:

  • The median pre-money valuation for Series D or later deals dropped from a record high of $3.5 billion in May 2022 to just $527 million in September 2022
  • For Series C deals, median pre-money valuations dropped from $502 million in June 2022 to $130 million in September 2022
  • The median pre-money valuation for Series B deals dropped from $164 million in June 2022 to $90 million in September 2022; and
  • While valuations haven’t compressed as much for smaller, early-stage checks — the amounts invested have.  The amounts invested dropped was -50% for Series A deals (from $3.5 billion to $1.8 billion), though just -9% for seed deals (from $932 million to $849 million)

This is consistent with other data sources, but in a much more specific and useful form.  Unicorns are, for now, at least, essentially dead.  Even Series D rounds, the handful that are still happening, aren’t even unicorns.  Series C deals are also almost nonexistent.  And at the earliest part of investing, seed is still active.  At least for now, investing early has only been partially impacted by stock prices that have fallen 50%-75% since their peaks for even the best in SaaS.

It is what it is for now.  Founders that are looking for seed rounds, understand it’s still out there.  And founders looking to raise later rounds, this is clear data on how much harder it gets for each round.  Series A and Series B rounds are at half the valuations of a year ago — twice as hard as last year.  And Series C rounds are 4x harder to pull off.  And later-stage deals have basically evaporated.

Most founders know it’s gotten tough — but not this tough.  And just how quickly things have deteriorated further for Series B and later rounds.  And the Q4 data almost certainly will be worse.

Make that capital last.

And a great related convo I had at G2 reach with Accel Growth, Iconiq Growth, and Salesforce Ventures here:

The full report here.

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