SANTA CLARA, CA, US – MARCH 13: People wait exterior the Silicon Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, CA, to withdraw funds after the federal authorities intervened upon the financial institution’s collapse, on March 13, 2023. (Photo by Nikolas Liepins/Anadolu Agency through Getty Images)
Nikolas Liepins | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images
The collapse of U.S.-based Silicon Valley Bank is unlikely to hit fundraising for tech startups in Southeast Asia, enterprise capitalists and an analyst advised CNBC.
The financial institution served many enterprise capital companies and enterprise capital-backed startups. But final week, depositors rushed to withdraw their funds as panic over the financial institution’s monetary state of affairs unfold, inflicting it to break down.
“I think [the impact on fundraising is] a watch out, but I don’t think that contagion spreads,” stated David Gowdey, managing companion at Southeast Asian enterprise capital agency Jungle Ventures, on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday.
“I think Secretary Yellen and the government did a fantastic job of stepping in and taking away a lot of that risk, creating a lot of stability in the markets,” he stated. On Sunday, U.S. officers together with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen introduced plans to backstop depositors of the financial institution.
Gowdey stated SVB was the agency’s main financial institution, however added, “We pull a lot of that money into Southeast Asia, into Singapore banks. And so for us, the exposure to SVB was not large.”
Golden Gate Ventures, which additionally invests in Southeast Asian startups, stated the SVB fallout is a chance for the area.
“This has actually been helpful to Southeast Asia. It now looks like a golden child to U.S. investors. Investors are starting to say: I want to diversify to different bank accounts, different geographies, different currencies,” Vinnie Lauria, managing companion at Golden Gate Ventures, advised CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Tuesday.
“And this is where Southeast Asia has the time to shine, in light of the situation,” added Lauria.
When requested if the state of affairs makes fundraising tougher, Gowdey stated funds in Southeast Asia are nicely capitalized.
“I think it’s being selective because of the macro environment. [Accessing] the capital will get harder, but the capital is there and it’s getting deployed,” stated Gowdey.
VC companies beforehand advised CNBC that financial uncertainties have made them pickier with investments in 2023.
“[In terms of] access to capital to tech entrepreneurs, the VCs will still be able to fund them,” Ray Wang, founder and chairman of Silicon Valley-based Constellation Research, advised CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Tuesday.
“But it’s the question about taking bank loans, having operating capital, being able to actually run operations and having a bank that understands how a technology company works or biotech company works. That’s really what’s being lost here,” added Wang.
Source: www.cnbc.com