Fortune | FORTUNE 10月15日 18:05
高盛收购Industry Ventures,标志着华尔街与风投的融合
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高盛宣布计划收购Industry Ventures,这笔高达6.65亿美元的交易(外加潜在的3亿美元绩效付款)引发了业界的广泛关注。此次收购尤为引人注目,因为风投公司作为收购目标极为罕见。Industry Ventures以其在风投二手市场(secondaries)的先锋地位而闻名,这笔交易不仅是高盛进军私募市场的重要一步,更是其为平台“画龙点睛”的战略举措。高盛认为二手市场是未来增长的关键领域,预计其增长速度将超过另类投资。随着公司上市周期延长,二手市场已成为私募市场的生命线,预计交易量将大幅增长。此次收购不仅显示了风投市场的成熟,也预示着机构投资者将更深入地布局私募领域,同时也带来了对未来风投生态系统和投资策略的思考。

💰 罕见的风投公司收购案:高盛以约6.65亿美元现金和股权收购Industry Ventures,并包含高达3亿美元的绩效付款,这在风投行业属于极不寻常的交易,凸显了风投行业日益增长的重要性。

📈 二手市场是核心:此次收购的关键在于Industry Ventures在风投二手市场(secondaries)的深厚积累和先锋地位。高盛将其视为进入私募市场并提供流动性解决方案、早期洞察风险投资交易流的关键“入口”。

🚀 私募市场增长潜力:高盛将二手市场视为“长期增长机会”,并认为其增长速度将超过另类投资。随着公司上市周期延长,二手市场已成为支撑私募市场运作的关键,预计交易量将大幅增长。

🌐 机构投资者布局深化:此交易表明,尽管风投领域存在不确定性和监管变化,但机构投资者正以前所未有的深度和广度进入私募市场,寻求多元化投资机会。

💼 平台整合与未来展望:高盛计划将Industry Ventures的整个团队纳入麾下,旨在通过此次收购完善其平台能力。此举也引发了关于此类整合是否会增强整体风投生态系统,或独立的专注策略是否能带来更好回报的讨论。

A venture capital firm, if you think about it, is an extremely weird acquisition target.

VC firms have malleable time horizons that are long (and getting longer), and fundamentally are devoted to high-risk investing that’s reasonably likely to fail. To boot, VC firms getting acquired is an exceptionally rare occurrence—examples exist, but they’re all scattered and odd, like Meta’s half-acquisition of AI two-man-show NFDG this year, or StepStone Group’s 2021 acquisition of Greenspring Associates. There are probably more visible comets in any five-year period than notable acquisitions of VC firms. 

So, when Goldman Sachs announced plans on Monday to acquire Industry Ventures, eyebrows shot up. The deal, for a venture firm with about $7 billion in assets under management, is substantial—$665 million in cash and equity, tacking on an additional performance-based $300 million through 2030. 

“This acquisition is the first of its kind and signals the increasing importance of VC in propelling the growth of Wall Street banks,” said Emily Zheng, PitchBook senior VC analyst. “Acquisitions of this scale are difficult to replicate given Goldman and Industry’s prominence, though we will likely see heightened investment in alternative strategies across banks after this news.”

So, does this mean Goldman’s now going to be competing with the Sand Hill Road set, elbowing into more hot funding rounds? Is this the next logical step after the arrival (and subsequent retreat) of hedge funds into the VC game a few years ago?

While Industry Ventures was an active startup investor, it was primarily known as a pioneer in the secondaries market. So, off the bat: the Goldman-Industry Ventures deal isn’t just about venture—it’s very specifically about secondaries. As Mercedes Bent, Lightspeed venture partner, points out: Industry is “one of the most established players in VC secondaries and hybrid funds, so this gives Goldman a high-quality on-ramp into private markets—both a liquidity solution and early visibility into venture deal flow.”

Marc Nachmann, Goldman’s global head of asset and wealth management, told Fortune that the firm sees secondaries as a “secular growth opportunity” and that the Industry Ventures deal is reflective of the banking giant’s “belief in rounding out our platform.”

“Right now, secondaries are less than 1% of primary,” Nachmann said. “However much you think alts will grow, secondaries will grow even faster… And people are going to want to manage their portfolio actively.” 

Secondaries have soared as companies have stayed private longer, going from a once-maligned tool to, increasingly, the lifeblood of the private markets. Some numbers suggest that, by the end of 2025, secondary trading volume could cross $200 billion, shattering last year’s record $162 billion.

“This deal really shows just how far the VC secondaries market has come in recent years—emerging as a critical component of venture portfolio management for firms of all types and sizes,” said Zach Aarons, MetaProp cofounder and general partner, via email. “Goldman appears to be buying the entire firm—the team, infrastructure, and operational capabilities to run this type of book into the future.”

Goldman’s Nachmann confirmed to Fortune that Industry’s entire team will be joining up. 

Acquisitions of VC firms will likely continue to be fairly anomalous, but we may see more of them. This deal shows, Costanoa managing partner Greg Sands says, “how attractive venture remains, even amid market uncertainty.” And there is uncertainty: The landscape is in regulatory flux from D.C. (consider the recent executive order linking private markets more closely to 401k plans) and via Silicon Valley and Wall Street.

“Acquisitions like this remain relatively rare, but they reflect how institutional investors are moving deeper into private markets, even as the venture landscape grows more bifurcated in terms of performance and strategy,” said Antonio Rodriguez, Matrix managing partner via email. “What remains to be seen is whether this kind of diversification ultimately strengthens the broader venture ecosystem, or whether maintaining a sharp, focused strategy will deliver better returns over time.”

For all that private market rules are shifting, the Goldman-Industry deal exists at the intersection of relentless, long-running trends—companies staying private longer and financial firms reaching further into private company dynamics. There’s also the slow but undeniable blurring of what it means to be a private company versus a public company, and the sense that private market opportunities have never been bigger. 

“In talking with public market investors, they are very aware of the fact that the number of publicly-traded companies in the U.S. has actually dropped fairly significantly over the last few decades (it has roughly halved in the last two decades),” said Don Butler, Thomvest Ventures managing director, via email. “So, the real game to be played feels increasingly like it is in the private markets.”

See you tomorrow,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email:alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
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Venture Deals

- Kailera Therapeutics, a Boston, Mass. and San Diego, Calif.-based developer of obesity therapeutics, raised $600 million in Series B funding. BainCapitalPrivateEquity led the round and was joined by AdageCapitalManagement, CanadaPensionPlanInvestmentBoard, Invus, and others.

- Lila Sciences, a Cambridge, Mass.-based scientific superintelligence company, raised $115 million in a Series A extension from IQT, AnalogDevices, CatalioCapitalManagement, DauntlessVentures, PennantInvestors, and others.

- OneImaging, a Miami, Fla.-based medical imaging company, raised $38 million in funding. VyCapital led the round and was joined by Aquiline, SempervirensVentureCapital, and others.

- Arbio, a Berlin, Germany-based AI platform designed to help with renting and running holiday rental properties, raised $36 million in Series A funding. Eurazeo led the round and was joined by OpenOcean and others.

- Nova Credit, a San Francisco-based credit infrastructure and analytics company, raised $35 million in Series D funding. SociumVentures led the round and was joined by CanapiVentures, KleinerPerkins, GeneralCatalyst, and others.

- Basis Theory, a San Francisco-based payments infrastructure platform, raised $33 million in Series B funding. Costanoa led the round and was joined by Stage 2 Capital, MonetaVC, and others.

- Marble, a New York City-based mental health platform for young people, raised $15.5 million in Series A funding. Costanoa led the round and was joined by TownHall Ventures and KhoslaVentures.

- Medmo, a New York City-based AI-powered care coordination platform for medical imaging, raised $15 million in Series A funding. CoveraHealth led the round and was joined by existing investors OriginVentures, LererHippeau, DigitalHealthVenturePartners, and ToppanGlobalVenturePartners.

- Airbound, a Bengaluru, India-based developer of delivery drones, raised $8.7 million in seed funding. LachyGroom led the round and was joined by LightspeedVenturePartners and HumbaVentures.

- Kuunda, a Cape Town, South Africa-based business-to-business lending-as-a-service company, raised $7.5 million in pre-Series A funding from PortugalGatewayFund, SeedstarsAfricaVentures, 4DiCapital, and others.

- SirenOpt, an Oakland, Calif.-based manufacturing intelligence platform for factory applications, raised $6.5 million in funding. Hitachi Ventures led the round and was joined by InMotion Ventures.

Private Equity

- UpdataPartners and DenaliGrowthPartners invested $77 million in MD Integrations, a New York City-based telehealth platform.

- AsburyCarbons, a portfolio company of MillRockCapital, agreed to acquire Graphit Kropfmühl, a Kropfmühl, Germany-based mining company. Financial terms were not disclosed. 

- Imprivata, backed by ThomaBravo, acquired Verosint, an Austin, Texas-based identity threat detection and response solutions company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- LevelBlue, backed by WillJamVentures, agreed to acquire Cybereason, a La Jolla, Calif.-based cybersecurity consulting company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- R1, backed by TowerBrook and CD&R, agreed to acquire Phare Health, a New York City-based developer of AI technology for inpatient coding and clinical documentation. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- ReynoldaEquityPartners acquired North American Lawn and Landscape, a Charlotte, N.C.-based commercial landscaping services company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- Security101, a portfolio company of GemspringCapital, acquired Security & Energy Technologies Corporation, a Chantilly, Va.-based systems integrator. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Funds + Funds of Funds

- Integrum, a New York City-based private equity firm, raised $2.5 billion for its second fund focused on services companies.

- Plexus Capital, a Raleigh, N.C.-based private equity firm, raised $1.3 billion across two funds focused on U.S.-based middle-market companies.

- Maximum Frequency Ventures, a New York City-based venture capital fund, raised $50 million for a new fund focused on cryptocurrency companies.

People

- Angeles Equity Partners, a Los Angeles, Calif.-based private equity firm, hired TrentKetterer as a vice president on the investment team. Formerly, he was with SunCapitalPartners.

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高盛 Industry Ventures 风投 私募股权 二手市场 Goldman Sachs Venture Capital Private Equity Secondaries Market
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