With fundraising being challenging in recent years, here are five emerging trends in impact investment in Asia for entrepreneurs to note
With the recent economic downturns and heightened geopolitical tension, investors have been more cautious in deploying capital. According to KPMG, global venture capital investment dropped to $75.9 billion in the first quarter of 2024, continuing the downward trend after a record-setting year in 2021.
Even though investment companies often seek innovative solutions for social and environmental issues like climate change and the lack of living space, impact startups are also facing fundraising challenges similar to other businesses. In 2023, a report from Intelligence platform Dealroom.co showed that they raised 36 percent less funding than in the previous two years.
To navigate this turbulent period, we reached out to industry experts, investors and entrepreneurs to uncover the key qualities for impact startups and crucial market trends for founders to know.
Read more: Recently Funded: K-ID’s Kieran Donovan on why finding like-minded investors makes all the difference
Find Asian solutions to Asian problems
Mark Cheng, an impact funder who founded a coaching platform Social Innovation Circle for social innovators, prioritises startups that can address significant and impending problems affecting a large part of Asia. He says companies that can ease the substantial pressure the growing ageing population has placed on East Asia’s healthcare system may have a shot at raising a larger amount of capital.
Moreover, their solutions need to be tailored to the local context instead of replicating existing business models from the West. “These solutions may not work in Asian cities with different cultures, demographics, urban densities and income levels. For example, an entrepreneur in China today can’t ignore the fact that everyone uses WeChat and other mobile-enabled platforms for almost all commerce,” Cheng says.