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Crunchbase data from the second quarter of 2022 shows a steep drop from previous record highs.

After a brief streak, venture capital has ditched Black startups

[Source Photo: Bruce Mars/Unsplash]

BY Nate Berg1 minute read

Black-founded startups have seen record amounts of investment recently, with quarterly funding commitments nearing or even topping $1 billion. But according to new data from Crunchbase, VC funding has dropped significantly in the second quarter of 2022, down to just $324 million.

  • Only 100 startups with a Black founder have received funding with $100 million invested in seed rounds, $591 million in early-stage rounds, and approximately $876 million in later-stage rounds.

  • Startups with at least one Black founder received 1.9% of deal counts and 1.2% of overall venture dollars invested in the U.S. so far this year.

This comes on the heels of a relatively strong streak for Black entrepreneurs. Beginning in the first quarter of 2021, VC funds invested at least $866 million in Black startups. These companies saw peak investments of $1.2 billion in three separate quarters since then, most recently the first quarter of 2022.

But that all came to a crash this quarter, with investments reaching just 27% of the level seen at the start of the year. The total number of deals is also down, from a peak of 119 in the first quarter of 2021 to just 35 this quarter. The total invested is lower than at any point since fall 2020.

Black-founded startups aren’t the only ones being ignored. VC funding to women-founded firms, and particularly entrepreneurs of color, has also been paltry in recent years, despite massive flows of VC money. In 2021, global venture capital investments totaled $643 billion, a 92% increase from the year before. Female entrepreneurs have seen only a small piece of this funding. Less than 3% of VC funding went to women entrepreneurs in 2019. For Black women, the numbers are even worse; they received just 0.64% of total venture capital funding, according to Project Diane.

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It’s unclear why VC investment has dropped so hard this quarter, or whether the drop-off will continue. Either way, the hard fall from the highs of Q1 2021 and Q1 2022 will be hard to stomach. Black-founded startups may be left wondering if those cash-rich five quarters starting in 2021 were just a fluke.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nate Berg is a staff writer at Fast Company, where he writes about design, architecture, urban development, and industrial design. He has written for publications including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Atlantic, Wired, the Guardian, Dwell, Wallpaper, and Curbed More


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