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by paragpatelone 3879 days ago
There is a bubble at the seed stage. There are tons of people (accredited investors) investing that stage and tons of incubators/accelerators to help introduce those startups to those investors.

Platforms like Angel list are helping fund allot more companies at the seed stage by having syndicates.

Now even non-accredited investors will be able to invest in startups[1]. So the seed stage is bubbling up.

http://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2015/10/30/sec-...

1 comments

It's not really possible for there to be a bubble at the seed stage -- valuations at that stage are "paper" values because there's zero liquidity. Companies also tend not to stay in the seed stage for long enough to cause an asset bubble; they are either able to acquire follow-on funding (at which point they're no longer a "seed" company) or they aren't and they disappear.

The seed stage is increasingly crowded, but IMO that's a good thing.

It's also worth noting that obtaining Series A Funding[1] is more difficult than ever. The bubble is not with growth stage companies, it's with massive Unicorns that earn 0 dollars.

1. http://firstround.com/review/what-the-seed-funding-boom-mean...

Interesting point re: not staying at the seed stage long enough for a bubble. What we're seeing instead is multiple preferences layered on in subsequent rounds.

So seed/A investors think they're doing well when the company raises B,C,D,E rounds at higher valuations, when in fact many will be washed out when the company eventually IPOs or is acquired at a lower valuation than their last venture round.

That's what I would expect -- the more crowded the market, the less leverage you have, and the lower your eventual payoff.

There are lots of people willing to provide companies with small amounts of money in exchange for a gigantic potential payoff. As payoffs decrease, lenders will exit the market.