DiscoverBeyond the Breakthrough with Thierry HelesWhy university venture funds are still uncommon in US and Europe
Why university venture funds are still uncommon in US and Europe

Why university venture funds are still uncommon in US and Europe

Update: 2024-08-29
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Despite the benefits of universities having a venture fund they can draw on to invest in companies they help commercialise, they are still a rarity in places with mature venture capital sectors like Europe and the US.





More top European universities have access to university venture funds than the US’s most research-intensive institutions — that’s the finding of Global University Venturing research published this summer. But the story isn’t quite that simple. Both geographies count an equal number of funds, but multi-university venture funds (investment vehicles backing spinouts from two or more institutions) are a more common feature in Europe.





One reason for that is deal flow: Ireland, for example, saw a total of 26 new spinouts founded in the whole country last year so a fund for a single institution wouldn’t be sustainable. Indeed, the Atlantic Bridge-managed University Bridge Fund is backed by multiple universities and invests throughout the nation.





Surprisingly, while raising a venture fund is a live discussion at universities on both continents, some are against setting up an investment vehicle to the point of declining money offered by alumni. There’s a few reasons for this, including financial risk, that we’ll dive into on this episode. Fill out a brief survey to help us with more university venture fund research.


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Why university venture funds are still uncommon in US and Europe

Why university venture funds are still uncommon in US and Europe

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