"Workers are dumping their stock,
companies are cutting costs, and layoffs abound as troubling economic forces
hit tech start-ups.
Start-up workers came into 2022
expecting another year of cash-gushing initial public offerings. Then the stock
market tanked, inflation ballooned, and interest
rates rose. Instead of going public, start-ups began cutting costs and laying
off employees.
People started dumping their
start-up stock, too.
The number of people and groups
trying to unload their start-up shares doubled in the first three months of the
year from late last year, said Phil Haslett, a founder of EquityZen, which
helps private companies and their employees sell their stock.
The share prices of some billion-dollar start-ups, known as
“unicorns,” have plunged by 22 percent to 44 percent in recent months, he said.
“It’s the first sustained pullback
in the market that people have seen in legitimately 10 years,” he said.
That’s a sign of how the start-up world’s easy-money ebullience
of the last decade has faded. Each day, warnings of a coming downturn ricochet
across social media between headlines about another round of start-up job cuts.
And what was once seen as a sure path to immense riches — owning start-up stock
— is now viewed as a liability.
The turn has been swift. In the
first three months of the year, venture funding in the United States fell 8
percent from a year earlier, to $71 billion, according to PitchBook, which
tracks funding.
At least 55 tech companies have announced layoffs or shut
down since the beginning of the year, compared with 25 this time last year,
according to Layoffs.fyi, which monitors layoffs.
And I.P.O.s, the main way start-ups
cash out, plummeted 80 percent from a year ago as of May 4, according to
Renaissance Capital, which follows I.P.O.s.
Last week, Cameo, a celebrity
shout-out app; On Deck, a career-services company; and MainStreet, a financial
technology start-up, all shed at least 20 percent of their employees.
Fast, a payments start-up, and Halcyon Health, an
online health care provider, abruptly shut down in the last month.
And the grocery delivery company
Instacart, one of the most highly valued start-ups of its generation, slashed its valuation to $24
billion in March from $40 billion last year.
“Everything that has been true in
the last two years is suddenly not true,” said Mathias Schilling, a venture
capitalist at Headline. “Growth at any price is just not enough anymore.”
The start-up market has weathered
similar moments of fear and panic over the past decade. Each time, the market came roaring back and set records.
And there is plenty of money to keep money-losing companies afloat: Venture
capital funds raised a record $131 billion last year, according to PitchBook.
But what’s different now is a
collision of troubling economic forces combined with the sense that the
start-up world’s frenzied behavior of the last few years is due for a
reckoning. A decade-long run of low interest rates that enabled investors to
take bigger risks on high-growth start-ups is over. Inflation seems unlikely to
abate anytime soon. Even the big tech companies are faltering, with shares of
Amazon and Netflix falling below their prepandemic levels.
“Of all the times we said it feels
like a bubble, I do think this time is a little different,” said Albert Wenger,
an investor at Union Square Ventures.
On social media, investors and
founders have issued a steady drumbeat of dramatic warnings, comparing negative
sentiment to that of the early 2000s dot-com crash and
stressing that a pullback is “real.”
Even Bill Gurley, a Silicon Valley
venture capital investor who got so tired of warning start-ups about bubbly
behavior over the last decade that he gave up, has returned to form.
“The ‘unlearning’ process could be painful, surprising and unsettling to many,”
he wrote in April.
The uncertainty has caused some
venture capital firms to pause deal making. D1 Capital Partners, which
participated in roughly 70 start-up deals last year, told founders this year
that it had stopped making new investments for six months. The firm said that
any deals being announced had been struck before the moratorium, said two
people with knowledge of the situation, who declined to be identified because
they were not authorized to speak on the record.
Other venture firms have lowered the
value of their holdings to match the falling stock market. Sheel Mohnot, an
investor at Better Tomorrow Ventures, said his firm had recently reduced the
valuations of seven start-ups it invested in out of 88, the most it had ever
done in a quarter. The shift was stark compared with just a few months ago,
when investors were begging founders to take more
money and spend it to grow even faster.
That fact had not yet sunk in with
some entrepreneurs, Mr. Mohnot said. “People don’t realize the scale of change
that’s happened,” he said.
Entrepreneurs are experiencing
whiplash. Knock, a home-loan start-up with headquarters in New York City,
expanded its operations from 14 cities to 75 in 2021. The company planned to go
public via a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, valuing it at $2
billion. But as the stock market became rocky over the summer, Knock canceled
those plans and entertained an offer to sell itself to a larger company, which
it declined to disclose.
In December, the acquirer’s stock
price dropped by half and killed that deal as well. Knock eventually raised $70
million from its existing investors in March, laid off nearly half its 250
employees and added $150 million in debt in a deal that valued it at just over
$1 billion.
Throughout the roller-coaster year,
Knock’s business continued to grow, said Sean Black, the founder and chief
executive. But many of the investors he pitched didn’t care.
“It’s frustrating as a company to
know you’re crushing it, but they’re just reacting to whatever the ticker says
today,” he said. “You have this amazing story, this amazing growth, and you
can’t fight this market momentum.”
Mr. Black said his experience was not unique.
“Everyone is quietly, embarrassingly, shamefully going through this and not
willing to talk about it,” he said.
Matt Birnbaum, head of talent at the
venture capital firm Pear VC, said companies would have to carefully manage worker
expectations around the value of their start-up stock. He predicted a rude
awakening for some.
“If you’re 35 or under in tech,
you’ve probably never seen a down market,” he said. “What you’re accustomed to
is up and to the right your entire career.”
Start-ups that went public amid the
highs of the last two years are getting pummeled in the stock market, even more
than the overall tech sector. Shares in Coinbase, the cryptocurrency exchange,
have fallen 81 percent since its debut in April last year. Robinhood, the stock
trading app that had explosive growth during the pandemic, is trading 75
percent below its I.P.O. price. Last month, the company laid off 9 percent of its staff,
blaming overzealous “hypergrowth.”
SPACs, which were a trendy way for very young
companies to go public in recent years, have performed so poorly that some are
now going private again. SOC Telemed, an online health care start-up, went
public using such a vehicle in 2020, valuing it at $720 million. In February,
Patient Square Capital, an investment firm, bought it for around $225 million,
a 70 percent discount.
Others are in danger of running out of cash. Canoo, an
electric vehicle company that went public in late 2020, said on Tuesday
that it had “substantial doubt” about its ability to stay in business.
Blend Labs, a financial technology
start-up focused on mortgages, was worth $3 billion in the private market.
Since it went public last year, its value has sunk to $1 billion. Last month,
it said it would cut 200 workers, or roughly 10 percent of its staff.
Tim Mayopoulos, Blend’s president,
blamed the cyclical nature of the mortgage business and the steep drop in
refinancings that accompany rising interest rates.
“We’re looking at all of our
expenses,” he said. “High-growth cash-burning businesses are, from an
investor-sentiment perspective, clearly not in favor.”"
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