The business of funding disruptive businesses is booming—and is itself being disrupted

|14 min read

YOUNG COMPANIES everywhere were preparing for doomsday in March 2020. Sequoia Capital, a large venture-capital (VC) firm, warned of Armageddon; others predicted a “Great Unwinding”. Airbnb and other startups trimmed their workforces in expectation of an economic bloodbath. Yet within months the gloom had lifted and a historic boom had begun. America unleashed huge stimulus; the dominance of tech firms increased as locked-down consumers spent even more of their time online. Many companies, including Airbnb, took advantage of the bullish mood by listing on the stockmarket. The market capitalisation of American VC-backed firms that went public last year amounted to a record $200bn; it is on course to reach $500bn in 2021.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The next stage”

Adventure capitalism: Startup finance goes global

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European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a press conference on the day of an informal European Union leaders retreat at Alden Biesen castle, Belgium.