Lessons From 2008: How The Downturn Impacted Funding Two To Four Years Out (2024)

As we look at the current economic situation and try to navigate what’s ahead, an analysis of the 2008 downturn and how that impacted funding proves helpful. In an effort to help our readers put what’s happening today into context, we jumped aboard an analytical time machine set for 2008 when investors were sounding strong alarms to their venture-backed companies.

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At the time, such investors were telling companies to assess their runway and get profitable toward the end of the third and beginning of the fourth quarter in 2008.

To put it bluntly, Sequoia warned startups to “Get Real or Go Home.

The collapsing stock market in 2008, in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis, triggered these warnings. And in September 2008 Lehman Brothers (the fourth-largest investment bank in the U.S.) collapsed.

Walking it back

Unlike the 2000 dotcom crash, the 2008 financial crisis did not start in tech.

Kara Swisher, then founder of AllThingsD, captured the paradox in Irony Alert: Bubble-Making Venture Capitalists Start Popping Them, with venture firms popping their own bubbles, having caused the prior bubble in 2000.

Om Malik reported on the “Sequoia RIP Good Times meeting” with portfolio companies. At the time, one assessment was that the downturn could impact us for a long time to come, as much as 17 years from previous cycles. Another sentiment was that raising funding without being cash flow positive would be hard.

At that time, Jason Calacanis–now founder of Launch–wrote in his post (The) Startup Depression:“50-80% of the venture-backed startups currently operating will shut down or go on life-support.”

What this means today

Investors then–and now–quickly turned inward to assess their existing portfolio companies’ health to create strategies for those who have shorter runways and would need to cut back. Today, as then, companies are advised to plan for two years without raising new funding. All startups have to throw out previous business plans, reassess expenses, sales projections and risks.

Tomasz Tunguz of RedPoint wrote recently about what the venture market could look like in the coronavirus era.

Below we look at the same time period from Crunchbase global data to review early-stage funding trends from 2006 to 2012.

From our analysis, seed-stage rounds were the least impacted of all the early-stage rounds. Seed dollars grew in 2008, 2009 and 2010.

Why would this be the case when early-stage funding, especially for new companies, would be expected to slow down? We can hazard a guess that at the time seed was growing as a new institutional funding class due to the innovation in cloud (Amazon Web Services launched in 2006) and mobile (iPhone launched in 2007). The first trend made it far cheaper to launch a company, hence the growth of seed, and the second created a new wave of technology, establishing unique business opportunities.

Early-stage funding cuts

The funding environment shifted dramatically for Series A, B and C rounds in 2009 down year over year by 40 percent, 41 percent and 46 percent, respectively. The lowest quarter for Series A and B was the second quarter in 2009 and for Series C the third quarter. In 2010 the funding market started growing again, but it took until 2011 for Series A and C round amounts to reach above the volume of invested dollars in 2007.

Lessons From 2008: How The Downturn Impacted Funding Two To Four Years Out (1)

Global funding counts

Seed counts grew year over year. The slowest growth was the 2009 year post crash with 29 percent growth year over year. The following years, 2010, 2011 and 2012, all grew by more than 50 percent year over year.

A, B and C round counts in 2009 were down between 27 and 28 percent year over year. That means one-third fewer startups raised early-stage funding in 2009. Funding round counts grew in 2010. Series A round counts rose above 2007 levels in 2011, Series B in 2013 and Series C in 2014.

Lessons From 2008: How The Downturn Impacted Funding Two To Four Years Out (2)

Conclusion

The crisis this time around is very different. Business suspensions and closures have been dramatic as shelter-in-place orders have been set worldwide. Global travel is disrupted. Nonessential retail businesses have been closed. Manufacturing and construction are all closed down except essential functions. Elon Musk got knuckle-rapped for continued Tesla manufacturing despite the shelter-at-home order in Silicon Valley. The ramifications for society are widespread with daily mounting unemployment figures. The length of shelter-in-place in our communities will impact the longevity of this crisis.

The venture and tech industry have also changed quite dramatically since 2008, with more than sixfold expansion, and technology more integrated in our daily lives.

A week ago Joanna Glasner from Crunchbase news reported we have not seen a dip in funding … yet. We will continue to report on this in the months to come.

Methodology

  • Seed/Angel include financings that are classified as a seed or angel, include venture rounds without a designated series that are below $3 million.
  • Please note that all funding values are given in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted. Crunchbase converts foreign currencies to U.S. dollars at the prevailing spot rate from the date funding rounds are reported.

Illustration: Dom Guzman

Lessons From 2008: How The Downturn Impacted Funding Two To Four Years Out (3)

Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the Crunchbase Daily.

Lessons From 2008: How The Downturn Impacted Funding Two To Four Years Out (2024)

FAQs

What lessons did we learn from the 2008 financial crisis? ›

People were too smart and markets too dynamic for stimulus spending or other government interventions to have the desired effect. In its most extreme form, this “new classical” macroeconomics taught that any government attempts to stabilize the economy were pointless.

What ethical lessons should we learn from the 2008 financial crisis? ›

One of the main lessons to learn from the financial crisis is the importance of holding institutions - large and small, and including the federal government –accountable for their actions.

How did the 2008 financial crisis affect the financial sector? ›

The financial crisis of 2008 had both short- and long-term effects on the banking sector. It affected the sector over the short term by causing banks to lose money on mortgage defaults, interbank lending to freeze, and credit to consumers and businesses to dry up.

What changed after the 2008 financial crisis? ›

In the wake of the financial crisis of 2008-2009, banks raised their capital requirements, reduced their leverage, and were less exposed to subprime mortgages.

What lessons can we learn from the crisis? ›

10 Lessons we can Learn from a Crisis
  • You learn more about your strengths.
  • You discover where areas of daily life need improvements.
  • You become more aware of yourself.
  • You appreciate the little things a lot more.
  • You learn to treat people with empathy and kindness.
  • You understand what's most important in your life.
Sep 8, 2021

What are the moral problems highlighted by the 2007 2008 financial crisis? ›

One moral hazard that led to the financial crisis was banks believing they were too important to fail and that if they were in trouble, they would be rescued, leading to them taking on more risks.

What lessons can be learned from the 2007 2009 recession? ›

Disciplined investors know that diversifying their holdings is the best way to avoid the financial ruin that the risk of a single concentrated position can bring. Another lesson from the Great Recession was expense control. This can apply to corporations and individuals alike.

Which statement best summarize the financial crisis of 2008? ›

Expert-Verified Answer. The statement that best summarizes the financial crisis of 2008 is: Problems in the US economy caused the global economy to slow down, which made it harder for the United States to recover.

What lessons can be learned from the subprime mortgage meltdown? ›

The first lesson is that financial crises can have grave consequences—for the economy and the nation—that can linger for many years. The toll from the financial crisis was severe, with nine million jobs lost and eight million housing foreclosures amid the deepest economic downturn since the Great Depression.

Who did the 2008 financial crisis affect the most? ›

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace reports in its International Economics Bulletin that Ukraine, as well as Argentina and Jamaica, were the countries most deeply affected by the crisis. Other severely affected countries were Romania, Ireland, Russia, Mexico, Hungary, the Baltic states.

What happened in the 2008 financial crisis explained easily? ›

What Caused the 2008 Financial Crisis? The 2008 financial crisis began with cheap credit and lax lending standards that fueled a housing bubble. When the bubble burst, the banks were left holding trillions of dollars of worthless investments in subprime mortgages.

What were the 3 most significant effects of the recession of 2008? ›

The most severe economic downturn since World War II occurred between December 2007 and June 2009. During this period, hundreds of banks failed, millions of homes went into foreclosure, and Americans lost over $14 trillion in net worth. Unemployment levels swelled from 5% in 2007 to 10% in 2009.

Did the economy ever recover after 2008? ›

After contracting sharply in the Great Recession, the economy began growing in mid-2009, following the enactment of the financial stabilization bill (Troubled Asset Relief Program or TARP) and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Economic growth averaged 2.3 percent per year from mid-2009 through 2019.

What caused the Great Recession in 2008 and what can we learn from it? ›

The collapse of the housing market — fueled by low interest rates, easy credit, insufficient regulation, and toxic subprime mortgages — led to the economic crisis. The Great Recession's legacy includes new financial regulations and an activist Fed.

What are the lessons learned from the financial crisis of 2007 2009? ›

Stackhouse concluded with three main lessons learned from this crisis: High levels of debt, uncertain ability of borrowers to repay debt and an expectation that housing prices will always increase (among other factors) created a comfort level that was misguided.

What impact did the 2008 crisis have on the US economy? ›

As a result of the Great Recession, the United States alone lost more than 8.7 million jobs, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, doubling the unemployment rate. Further, U.S. households lost roughly $19 trillion in net worth as the stock market plunged, according to the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

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