Show me the money (Pt. 1): Dispatches' 2020 list of Europe's venture capital firms, private equity and early stage investors (2024)

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(Editor’s note:Dispatches Europe tracks the tech scene and capital trends in Europe because so many of our highly skilled internationals are engineers, physicists and developers who aspire to be part of the new new thing. This post, part of our Tuesday Tech series, is the first of two tracking risk capital in Europe.)

What we experience constantly as we work with startup teams is, the talented engineers and physicists we meet in European innovation centers know everything about the science, but not nearly as much about capital.

In the United States, we grow up worshiping entrepreneurs. We know Mike Markkula pulled up in front of Steve Jobs’ house in a Corvette and agreed to invest $350,000 when Apple Computer was still in the Jobs’s Los Altos garage.

We know the difference between convertible debt and senior-secured debt, between VCs and private equity; a term sheet and an NDA. The dynamics of capital and the startup culture are just part of our DNA.

(See Dispatches’ handy guide to risk-capital and investment terms here.)

Though this is changing rapidly, in Europe – prestige-wise – being an entrepreneur has been way down the ladder from even a mid-level VP at French, German or Dutch companies. So, when it comes to early-stage risk capital, Europe has lagged (badly) behind the U.S. until recently, when large European investment firms such as Index Ventures and Atomico started raising hundreds of millions and even billions in funds.

Nature abhors a vacuum and now American and Chinese VCs and private equity firms are arriving and investing. But increasingly, Europeans are loathe to take investment from the more aggressive Americans and Chinese. The reality is, there are simply too few significant European-based VCs outside of London and Dublin.

This year is unique in that U.S.-based and China-based VCs are in a race to find worthy tech startups simply because they can outbid the locals in deals, with a buck’s worth of equity in a European startup in a Series A funding round costing $1.60 in the U.S., according to Atomico’s 2019 State of European Tech report.

That’s a discount too good to pass up. Trust us – Americans love a bargain.

Now, how to get their attention …

At this level, it’s not easy, though you can pitch INKEF and Creandum through their websites. But where incubators, accelerators and venture builders beg you to apply, getting in the boardroom at, say, Hedosophia is tough. In fact, the path to a VC or private equity firm is often through the contacts of your early investors and your accelerator. Though if you’ve got tech magic, the VCs and PE folks will find you … and throw money at you, which can be a bad thing. But that’s a story for another time.

Major American and Chinese firms

Accel

Accel, based in Palo Alto, has had an office in London for more than 20 years and pretty much had Europe to itself. As a result, it’s had a number of successes including Blablacar, Deliveroo and Spotify.

Accel closed a $575 million fund late last year, capital set aside for Europe and Israel. The major knock on them is that they’re tough to approach.

Accel invests at multiple stages including seed, as well as in early-stage startups and scale-ups.

Balderton Capital

Balderton started out the European operations of Sand Hill Road stalwart Benchmark. Now it’s an independent VC based in London. Is this a British firm or American? We listed it under the U.S. firms just because of its roots and because it has more in common with Accel, which also started in The Valley.

Balderton both makes direct investments in early-stage companies (usually A rounds) and it buys the equity stakes of early investors who want to cash out of fast-growing tech scale-ups.

Balderton has raised $2.7 billion in total since 2000.

B Capital Group

In 2018, Eduardo Saverin and Raj Ganguly showed up here in Eindhoven, our HQ, on High Tech Campus Eindhoven unannounced. If you don’t know who Saverin and Ganguly are, then go look them up real fast. We”ll give you a minute …

Okay, where were we? Oh, yeah, Saverin and Ganguly are out in the world, making investments in Mexico, Singapore and, yes, Europe. B Capital recently raised a second 10-year fund of more than $800 million. Though it’s not a B Capital deal, Saverin just backed Antler, the Singapore-based early-stage fund/venture builder, which has offices in Amsterdam and across the globe.

So connect the dots … and expect B Capital – based in LA and Singapore – to make news sooner rather than later.

Tencent

To get an idea of WeChat owner Tencent’s leverage in the startup world, it’s the world’s sec­ond largest in­vestor in tech uni­corns af­ter Menlo Park-based Se­quoiaCap­i­tal. The Shenzhen-based conglomerate has invested across Europe including in Paris-based game company Voodoo.

Late last year, Tencent announced it would invest $10 billion in Europe, about a third of that in Germany.

So far in 2020, Tencent has made at least five investments in Europe, including two in fintech, one in digital media, one in marketplaces and one in the software space. In June, Tencent acquired about 80 percent of Czech Republic–based video game developer Bohemia Interactive for $260 million, according to media reports.

Fun facts:

Tencent has invested in more than 800 companies, at least 160 of which are Unicorns. Since it bought Finnish gaming company Supercell, Tencent is by far the world’s biggest mobile game company.

Show me the money (Pt. 1): Dispatches' 2020 list of Europe's venture capital firms, private equity and early stage investors (1)

Kleiner Perkins

This is the original Sand Hill Road VC where giants such as John Doerr changed the world with investments in Amazon and Google.

Last month, Kleiner Perkins has joined a number of syndicated deals including a $100 million round in Berlin-based digital travel reference Omio, which started as GoEuro.

Required reading to really understand Kleiner and the VC world: “The New New Thing,” by Michael Lewis.

Major European firms

EQT AB

This publicly traded Stockholm-based PE/buyout firm has about 41 billion euros to invest and invest it does. Unlike VC firms, private equity firms and buyout firms acquire companies either to hold, to pimp them out and take them public or to sell them. So if you’re starting out today, you goal should be either to sell out to these guys or to bring them in on the way to an IPO.

EQT has raised more than 62 billion eurosin capital since its inception and currently has about 41 billionin assets under management across 19 active funds within three business segments:private capital, real assets and credit, according to its financial filings.

The firm is famous for investing across sectors including health care and consumer-facing companies as well as across borders.

Show me the money (Pt. 1): Dispatches' 2020 list of Europe's venture capital firms, private equity and early stage investors (2)

Hedosophia

Based in London, Hedosophia is a major investor in European fintech, though unlike most American VCs, it flies so far under the radar we can’t quite figure out how they maintain deal flow. But they do, typically coming in at the B round, investing between $10 million and $30 million, according to this amazingly detailed post on Sifted. So, we’re guessing they have a “don’t call us; we’ll call you” policy.

The Hedosophia website is just a landing page, though the founder, Ian Osborne, is already a legend at 37 years old.

According to the media reports we found, Hedosophia has about $1 billion under management including backing from Michael Bloomberg, the American media mogul who’s worth an estimated $55 billion.

Hedosophia holds a significant piece of N26, the Berlin-based digital-only bank that’s been struggling as of late with internal management issues. The firm also holds stakes in online money transfer firm TransferWise, based in London, and Raisin, a startup neobank based in Berlin.

INKEF

Founded and backed by a giant Dutch pension fund, INKEF Capital, based in Amsterdam, has 500 million euros under management. INKEF is an early-stage investor in red hot AI medical startup Castor. They’ve had two major exits with 3D giant Shapeways, now based in New York, and Sapiens, which was sold to Medtronic for $200 million back in 2014.

Unlike most VCs, you can email INKEF at this address.

Creandum

Guernsey-based Creandum, which started out as Swedish, making its bones investing in Spotify and iZettle. The tech-focused VC just closed Creandum V,a $300 million early-stage fund.Creandum just expanded its Berlin offices with other offices in Stockholm and San Francisco.

And like INKEF, you can ping them here with your idea.

Tune in next time when we’ll tell you about Atomico, Index Ventures and more of the American and Chinese investment firms where money is burning a hole in their pockets.

Terry Boyd

Website | + posts

Co-CEO of Dispatches Europe. A former military reporter, I'm a serial expat who has lived in France, Turkey, Germany and the Netherlands.

Show me the money (Pt. 1): Dispatches' 2020 list of Europe's venture capital firms, private equity and early stage investors (4)

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Show me the money (Pt. 1): Dispatches' 2020 list of Europe's venture capital firms, private equity and early stage investors (2024)

FAQs

How many venture capital firms are there in Europe? ›

The most comprehensive analysis of fundraising, investment and divestment trends with data on more than 1,800 European private equity and venture capital firms, the 2021 statistics cover 91% of the €754bn in capital under management in Europe.

What is the Pan European venture capital Fund of funds? ›

The Pan-European Venture Capital Fund(s)-of-Funds programme (VentureEU) was designed to further address Europe's equity gap, the fragmentation of the VC market and the need to attract additional private funding from institutional investors into the EU venture capital asset class.

What companies are funded by venture capital? ›

Some of these VCs include Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock Partners, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Accel Partners, and Sequoia Capital. These five VCs have backed some of the world's largest tech companies such as Facebook, Google, Uber and Slack.

What are the best cities for venture capital in Europe? ›

Today, there are VC firms operating in almost every European country. And while London is still the most active VC hub in Europe, other cities like Berlin, Paris, and Barcelona are also starting to attract more attention from investors.

What is the average fee for venture capital funds? ›

Venture management fees are generally calculated as a percentage of the committed capital in the fund. They are commonly set between 1% to 2.5%. In other words: if a fund has $100 million in committed capital and charges a 2% management fee, the fee would amount to $2 million annually.

How much money do I need to start a venture capital fund? ›

Setting up a fund may vary depending on the stage the fund wants to invest in, the sector or industry, and the performance objectives for its portfolio companies. Full-time GPs typically require between $20 MM and $40 MM per head in fund size to cover salaries and expenses, assuming a 2% management fee.

How long does a venture capital fund last? ›

Venture capital funds typically have long tenures, beginning the first closing and running for 8-10 years. Fund managers usually seek pre-determined extension periods (2-3 years for example) to allow them for a smooth exit from all investments. Early termination is also possible, based on certain trigger events.

How big is venture capital in Europe? ›

Funding to European startups reached $52 billion in 2023, down 39% year over year from $86 billion invested in 2022, Crunchbase data shows. However, Europe's share of the venture capital ecosystem has increased since 2021.

What are the three types of venture capital funds? ›

Types of Venture Capital Funds

Venture Capital Funds are classified on the basis of their utilisation at different stages of a business. The 3 main types are early stage financing, expansion financing, and acquisition/buyout financing. There are 3 sub-categories in early stage financing.

What is European venture capital? ›

Venture capital funds raise a large part of their funding from institutional investors and they usually invest large amounts into firms with the potential for rapid growth.

Does Coca Cola have a venture capital fund? ›

We are committed to achieving net zero emissions across our entire value chain by 2040. Coca-Cola HBC has joined with The Coca-Cola Company and seven other leading bottling partners from around the world to announce a first-of-its-kind, sustainability-focused venture capital fund of $137.7 million.

Do venture capital firms use their own money? ›

Their capital doesn't come from their own pockets. Instead, they get their money from individuals, corporations, and foundations. This means they are often using the capital of others to make investments, and oftentimes, invest millions of dollars into companies with proven potential.

Do banks provide venture capital funding? ›

A variety of venture capital firms and banks provide funding and other support for entrepreneurs from seed money and early stage to full development and growth. View by category.

How many venture capital firms are there? ›

According to data from industry associations and research firms, there are approximately 8,000-10,000 active venture capital (VC) firms globally as of 2022. However, the venture capital landscape is highly concentrated towards certain regions when it comes to actual investments.

How many startups are there in Europe? ›

The UK leads with almost 13,000 funded tech companies in total, and has the largest count of companies across all buckets of total capital raised. The number of funded startups in the UK, France, and Germany (around 23,000) is greater than the total for the rest of Europe combined (around 21,600).

How many venture capital firms are there in the UK? ›

However, despite this, there are currently 547 active VC and PE funds in the UK—that have participated in a total of 15,923 fundraisings— that continue to invest in the most ambitious and innovative startups and scaleups. Just last year, VC and PE funds were involved in 1,530 deals worth a combined £28.3b.

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