LOS ANGELES, Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- Dollars invested in
Internet companies, historically a staple of Silicon Valley, dropped 36 percent
from quarter to quarter, according to figures published on Saturday.
Investments in early stage companies are also down
because venture capitalists are focused on later stage companies they would like
to take public but can't because the public markets are shut down, according to
two separate reports by Dow Jones VentureSource and MoneyTree.
This signaled what some said might be a permanent
shift in the types of companies attracting time and money from these investors,
said the San Francisco Chronicle, which published the reports.
"We're continuing to see a lot of companies that
should be out of the nest by now," said Mark Heeson, president of the National
Venture Capital Association, which contributes to the MoneyTree report.
"Time is a problem for venture capitalists, so less
time and money is going to new entrepreneurs and new ideas."
All venture capital investments are expected to be
down for several more quarters, according to Tracy Lefteroff, global managing
partner of the venture capital practice at Pricewaterhouse Coopers.
Given uncertainty in the economy, the confidence of
venture capitalists in the third quarter fell to its lowest level ever,
according to a recent survey by Professor Mark Cannice at the University of San
Francisco. Cannice has conducted the survey since the first quarter of 2004.
Cutbacks at startups also continue, following stern
warnings earlier this month by several venture capital firms and other investors
to their portfolio companies to get serious and cut costs, according to the
Chronicle.
Many of the startups cutting expenses and laying off
employees are Internet companies, the paper said, adding that the crunch has
also hit some of the best capitalized companies in the Silicon
Valley.