Hundreds of Chinese startups are about to hit an impassable wall

TECHi's Author Carl Durrek
Opposing Author Techinasia Read Source Article
Last Updated
TECHi's Take
Carl Durrek
Carl Durrek
  • Words 71
  • Estimated Read 1 min

China has been experiencing a startup boom over the past couple of years thanks to how easy it is for these companies to secures series A and series B funding. However, reaching the almighty series C round may prove to be much, much harder. According to Chinese venture capitalist Ran Wang, hundreds of Chinese startups are going to be left without series C funding this year for a number of reasons. 

Techinasia

Techinasia

  • Words 133
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

Startups in China raising series A and series B rounds found it exceedingly easy to secure funding in the past two years. Evaluations skyrocketed and early stage startups repeatedly made headlines with their “tens of millions of dollars” in investment. It happened so often we couldn’t keep up with writing about them all. But the fortunes of all those startups lucky enough to fundraise in an overheated market are about to change, according to one prominent investor. Ran Wang, founder of Chinese venture capital firm ECapital, earlier this week published an article in China’s Entrepreneur Magazine that predicts tough times ahead for growth-stage startups in China. 90 percent of those startups who soared through their series A and series B rounds will not be able to raise series C rounds, Wang writes.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Techinasia

What makes WeChat so much better than other messaging apps?
What makes WeChat so much better than other messaging apps?

It's almost as hard for Chinese companies to break out of the country as it is for Western companies to…

Alibaba wants to bring e-commerce to rural areas
Alibaba wants to bring e-commerce to rural areas

Somewhere around 600 million people live in the Chinese countryside, and Alibaba has spent years trying to turn them into customers.…

Chinese consumers are tired of all these iPhone clones
Chinese consumers are tired of all these iPhone clones

Chinese companies used to be able to make some serious cash by creating a decent iPhone clone and then selling…

Xiaomi is considering going public
Xiaomi is considering going public

Xiaomi is second only to Uber in terms of how much people are anticipating its IPO, and although CEO Lei Jun…