Executive Summary
Stout is pleased to present our Q1 2026 Venture Capital Industry Update based on the latest data available as of March 31, 2026. This newsletter is a testament to Stout’s specialized expertise on the U.S. VC industry and aims to provide you with the latest trends and key market developments along with our in-depth analysis and thought-provoking insights.
In this edition, we will dive into different aspects of the VC landscape, including a Market Overview, Deal Volume and Activity, Pricing Analysis, the FTSE VC Index, and Exit Activity. Each section is designed to keep you informed and up to date with the latest trends in the ever-evolving VC industry.
VC Environment in Q1 2026
- VC Market Dynamics: In Q1 2026, VC activity reflected a more concentrated investment environment, with late-stage financings accounting for the largest share of invested capital and strong investor appetite for AI-focused companies contributing to overall market momentum. Valuations continued to rise, while median deal size declined and capital deployment remained selective, suggesting that investors continued to support strong pricing while remaining cautious.
- Unicorn Activity: Q1 2026 saw a sharp acceleration in Unicorn creation, as AI-focused companies led activity. Growth reflects the capital-intensive nature of scaling, with innovation, scalability, and operational performance playing an important role in driving valuations.
- Highlights in Exit Activity: VC exit activity accelerated in Q1 2026, with the Information Technology (IT) sector continuing to lead transaction volume, as investors concentrated on opportunities with durable, long-term potential particularly in AI. Activity patterns also indicate sustained interest in more mature companies as investors remain disciplined and selective in capital deployment.
Deal Volume and Activity
VC Deal History
U.S. VC deal activity increased in Q1 2026, with deal count rising 5.6% QoQ. Capital invested recorded a remarkable 238.7% increase compared to Q4 2025, climbing from $76.9 billion to $260.6 billion, driven mainly by few significant AI deals.
U.S. Venture Capital Activity
Capital Invested in Billions of U.S. Dollars and Deal Count in Actual Numbers
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
Deal and Volume Activity by Funding Stage
Early-Stage1 invested capital activity decreased in Q1 2026, dropping 22.8 percentage points QoQ. In Q1 2026, Early-Stage investments accounted for 33.1% of total invested capital, while Late-Stage investments2 represented 66.9%, marking a shift from Q4 2025, when Early-Stage investments comprised the majority of capital deployed.
U.S. Venture Capital Activity per Stage
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
Historically, Early-Stage deals have consistently outnumbered Late-Stage deals, a pattern that persisted in Q1 2026. Despite their smaller volume, Late-Stage saw a significant surge in invested capital, largely attributable to several outsized AI-related financings.
Pricing & Deal Characteristics Analysis
Pre- and Post-Money Valuation
Pre-money valuations continued to rise in Q1 2026, though at a more moderate pace, accompanied by a slight increase in deal activity. Specifically, the median pre-money valuation grew by 13.8% compared to the previous quarter, while the deal count rose modestly by 5.6% during the same period.
Median Pre-Money Valuation
In Millions of U.S. Dollars
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which pre-money valuation was available.
By analyzing the implied post-money valuation per industry, the Financial Services sector led Q1 2026, continuing the trend observed in Q4 2025. In comparison with the prior quarter, the median post-money valuation of total deals increased by 14.5% QoQ, accompanied by a significant 62.0% increase in the median post-money valuation within the Materials and Resources sector continuing the upward trend observed in the prior quarter. Additionally, the Information Technology sector saw a notable increase in the median post-money valuation by 46.2%, while the Energy sector recorded the largest drop, with the median post-money valuation decreasing by 48.1%.
Median Post-Money Valuation per Industry
In Millions of U.S. Dollars
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which post-money valuation was available. The value of "Dec-25 Financial Services" is truncated due to its magnitude, the value is $387m USD.
Deal Size
The median deal size experienced a QoQ decrease of 14.3% in Q1 2026, with notable variations across sectors emphasizing a dynamic market environment. The Materials and Resources sector recorded the sharpest contraction in observed deal characteristics, with its median deal size dropping by 52.9%. Similarly, the Business Products and Services (B2B), Consumer Products and Services (B2C) and Healthcare sectors faced QoQ declines of 15.1%, 10.7% and 16.9% respectively. On the other hand, the Energy sector posted particularly strong growth, with the median deal size increasing by 149.1%. Meanwhile, the Financial Services and Information Technology sectors recorded more moderate QoQ increases of 15.6% and 21.5% respectively, underscoring the divergent trends across industries.
Median Deal Size per Industry
In Millions of U.S. Dollars
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which deal size was available.
Valuation Step-Up
The valuation step-up (“Valuation Step-Up”) is the increase in valuation of the current financing round relative to the prior financing round and is calculated as the current VC round implied pre-money valuation divided by the prior VC round implied post-money valuation. The Valuation Step-Up serves as an indicator of startup performance and investor confidence. In this section, we analyzed the historical median Valuation Step-Up per industry.
As of Q1 2026, the median Valuation Step-Up per industry was between 1.5x-3.2x. This could suggest a gradual improvement from the more normalized levels observed following the market reset that began in mid-2022. That reset, driven by rising interest rates and heightened economic uncertainty, led to a moderation in pricing for VC-backed companies, with recent figures indicating a potential measured recovery in valuation step-ups.
Compared to the prior quarter, the median Valuation Step-Up in Q1 2026 increased by 11.4%. The Financial Services sector experienced the largest upward movement, with a 56.1% increase in its Valuation Step-Up, while the Energy sector saw the largest decline, recording a 5.6% QoQ decrease.
Median Valuation Step-Up per Industry
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which Valuation Step-Up details were available.
Down Round Financing
To assess the health of the VC ecosystem, we analyzed the historical percentage of deals classified as down rounds.
Since mid-2022, the U.S. VC market has entered a period marked by a high incidence of down rounds driven by several key factors: (i) tightened capital markets resulting from broader macroeconomic challenges, prompting investors to adopt capital concentration strategies, (ii) a market correction reflecting a significant “valuation reset” following the rapid stock appreciation of 2021, and (iii) a shift toward “valuation discipline”, with a stronger emphasis on realistic valuations grounded in fundamental growth and cash flow generation.
In Q1 2026, the percentage of down-rounds was 6.6% of total deals, marking a decrease from 9.6% in the previous quarter, suggesting a potential easing of valuation pressure heading into 2026, though one quarter is insufficient to confirm a trend reversal.
Total Deals and Percentage of Down Rounds
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which round details were available.
Investor Mixture
In this section, we analyzed the percentage of new investors participating in deals on a deal-by-deal basis, categorized per industry.
By March 2026, the percentage of new investors experienced an absolute decrease of 8.9% compared to the beginning of Q3 2025, reflecting a sustained decline in investor participation. The total percentage of new investors decreased to 55.4% in Q1 2026, down from 56.0% in Q4 2025. Sector-level analysis highlights varying trends with the Energy sector seeing the most significant drop.
New investor participation continued showing signs of restraint in Q1 2026 amid a backdrop of constrained liquidity, ongoing inflationary pressures, geopolitical instability, and elevated economic and policy uncertainty. These conditions appear to have contributed to a more selective approach to new deal activity, with concerns around company stability potentially playing a role across various industries.
Percentage of New Investors per Deal
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which investor details were available.
Percentage of New Investors per Industry
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which investor details were available.
Deal Contractual Rights
This section presents a breakdown of deals categorized by their respective security contractual rights. The accompanying graphs classify transactions based on key factors such as waterfall seniority and conversion rights (convertible or participating).
Notably, the peak in strong investor rights observed in deals during 2022 and 2023 coincided with the transition from the rapid private market growth of 2021 to a period of economic challenges driven by high inflation and macroeconomic headwinds. These market conditions, yield expectations in the private markets, and overall investors’ risk tolerance prompted the inclusion of stronger investor-friendly rights (i.e., higher seniority, higher liquidation preference or participating preferred structures) in new deals to mitigate the increased systematic risk. By 2026, however, as market expectations stabilized and entry valuation levels moderated, market participants placed greater emphasis on standard, default VC contract characteristics tied to convertible, pari passu preferred securities with 1.0x liquidation preference and standard weighted average anti-dilution provisions.
More specifically, in Q1 2026, the proportion of deals including participating securities decreased from 2.6% to 1.5% QoQ. Similarly, the share of deals featuring senior instruments decreased from 9.1% to 7.5%, compared to the previous quarter.
Deal Breakdown per Seniority
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which seniority details were available.
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on VC transactions for which security details were available.
Unicorn Valuation Multiples
The term unicorn (“Unicorn”) refers to venture capital-backed companies that have achieved $1 billion post-money valuation. We analyzed several financial, valuation, deal, and industry characteristics of 92 companies that reached the Unicorn valuation status this quarter. Q1 2026 saw a meaningful rise in the number of companies reaching Unicorn status, compared to Q4 2025 (20 Unicorn companies). This acceleration appears to have been driven primarily by strong investor appetite for AI-focused startups and adjacent sectors such as robotics. Notably, several of the newly minted Unicorns were relatively young companies, suggesting that the path to a billion-dollar valuation may be shortening for startups operating in these high-demand spaces.
Companies valued up to $2 billion represent 59.8% of the sample underscoring a strong skew toward growth-stage companies. Valuation Step-Up multiples that range from 3x to 10x cover 55.4% of the sample, while 2 of the new Unicorns achieved exceptional growth Step-Up exceeding 10x. Revenue distribution shows 35.0% of Unicorns generating up to $100 million and 40.0% generating revenues from $100 to $500 million, while 10.0% report revenues of $500 million to $1 billion and 15.0% above $1 billion, highlighting strong scalability. Revenue multiples were concentrated at the upper end of the range, with 50.0% of the sample exhibiting multiples above 50.0x and a further 25.0% falling between 20.0x and 50.0x, emphasizing market dominance for top performers and high growth potential.
AI-focused companies lead the landscape at 66.3%, far outpacing fintech (10.9%) and other industries (22.8%), while 62.0% of Unicorns require up to 5 funding rounds to scale (compared to 40% in Q4 2025), suggesting a potential shortening of the path to Unicorn valuation. Overall, the data underscores the importance of innovation, scalability, and operational performance in driving Unicorn valuations.
Unicorn Statistics - Q1 2026
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
Valuation Step-Up is calculated using available pre- and post-money valuation data. Rounds with missing or undisclosed information are included in the sample and illustrated as n/a in the exhibit.
Unicorn Statiscs - Q1 2026
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
FTSE Venture Capital Index
FTSE VC Index Performance
The FTSE VC Index serves as a benchmark for tracking the performance of VC-backed companies and valuation trends across the ecosystem. In this section, we dive into the latest movements in the index, highlighting key shifts, emerging sectors, and the broader implications for investors.
The VC Index has outperformed public equity indices over the long term, albeit with higher volatility and deeper lows. Specifically, the index indicates that asset class experienced significant price appreciation starting in early 2020, reaching a peak around late 2021. However, a sharp decline was observed in early 2022, followed by a steady recovery starting in 2023, with a particularly steep rise recorded in 2025 and sharp decline in Q1 2026. This performance demonstrates the volatility inherent in VC investments.
FTSE Venture Capital Index Performance
Source: https://www.lseg.com/en/ftse-russell/indices/venture-capital-index and https://dscqg.com/
Correlation
Correlation Matrix
| FTSE Venture Capital Index | S&P 500 | Russell 2000 Index | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FTSE Venture Capital Index | 100.0% | 82.9% | 65.9% |
| S&P 500 | 82.9% | 100.0% | 85.8% |
| Russell 2000 Index | 65.9% | 85.8% | 100.0% |
The VC market has a strong correlation with the S&P 500 over the past 13 years reflecting its sensitivity to broader macroeconomic and capital market conditions. However, the correlation is lower with the Russell 2000 Index, suggesting that the VC market has more unique drivers compared to small-cap equities. Importantly, the VC market does not move in lockstep with public markets, which provides some diversification benefits despite the relatively high correlation.
Cumulative Returns
Cumulative Returns
| 1-year | 2-year | 5-year | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FTSE Venture Capital Index | 0.7% | 4.7% | -2.7% |
| S&P 500 | 16.3% | 24.2% | 64.3% |
| Russell 2000 Index | 24.1% | 17.5% | 12.4% |
The VC market is highly volatile, offering exceptional returns during strong periods, but is also associated with increased risk, reflected in both valuations and number of successful exits. Careful consideration should be given to both idiosyncratic asset properties and broader systematic factors.
Exit Activity
Overview
Exit activity accelerated in Q1 2026, with total transaction volume increasing 8.8% QoQ. IT continued to be the primary sector of exits, accounting for 56.1% of all transactions – well above the 41.6% share of VC-backed companies in the sector. This outsized exit activity likely reflects elevated IT valuations, creating favorable conditions for companies to pursue exits, as well as sustained buyers’ demand for tech assets that are critical to enterprise infrastructure or tied to long-term secular shifts such as AI, cybersecurity, and data management. While other sectors such as Healthcare and Business Products remain active, Healthcare’s relative share of exits declined, whereas Business Products saw a relative uptick.
Percentage of Exit Deals per Industry - Q1 2026
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
Consistent with historical trends, mergers and acquisitions remained the dominant exit route, representing the majority of total exits over the past year as the IPO market has been relatively inactive.
Historical Number of Exits
Number of Exits in actual numbers
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. *Other exits include Secondary Buyouts, Investor Buyout by Management, Merger of Equals, and Reverse Merger.
Exit volumes exhibited periodic fluctuations over the past twelve months, with no sustained directional trend, indicating a volatile exit environment.
IPO Exits
There were a total of 54 IPO Exits of VC-backed companies in the twelve months ended March 31, 2026, 15 of which were in Q1 2026. The following table illustrates select performance metrics for the 14 VC-backed companies that completed the largest IPO exits in Q1 2026, based on available valuation and deal size data.
Top 14 IPO Exits of VC-backed Companies ranked by Post-Money Valuation - Q1 2026
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Based on post-money valuation of actual VC IPO transactions.
The metrics presented in the following table provide a consolidated view of the capital raise activity and timing dynamics of these companies. The data indicates that the average IPO valuation of approximately $1.4 billion was supported by an average IPO deal size of $270 million. On average, companies experienced a 1.40x Valuation Step-Up from their last private financing round to the IPO, demonstrating modest but consistent value accretion prior to listing. The average interval between the latest financing round and the IPO was 1.35 years, and companies completed an average of 5 financing rounds prior to going public. With only one notable exception, the companies in this sample followed the standard trajectory of multiple pre-IPO rounds, underscoring that sustained private-market fundraising is a common characteristic of eventual IPO candidates.
IPO Metrics Q1 - 2026
| Metric | Average | Median | Minimum | Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IPO Valuation | $ 1,400 | $ 950 | $ 50 | $ 6,150 |
| IPO Deal Size | 270 | 210 | 20 | 750 |
| Timing from last round to IPO (in years) | 1.35 | 1.00 | 0.20 | 3.90 |
| Valuation Step-Up from last round to IPO | 1.40x | 1.15x | 0.30x | 3.40x |
| Number of rounds (excl. IPO) | 5 | 4 | 1 | 9 |
| Average timing between rounds (in years) | 1.60 | 1.35 | 0.80 | 3.70 |
Source: PitchBook Data, Inc. Valuation Step-Ups are calculated using available pre- and post-money valuation data. Rounds with missing or undisclosed information are not included in the sample.
- Early-Stage deals include Series Seed, Series A, and Series B funding rounds.
- Late-Stage deals include Series C, Series D, Series E, and Series F funding rounds.