Analysis: The Israeli tech sector is soaring thanks to U.S. money printers going brrr
Hyperinflation is causing tech company valuations to spike, with 91% of startups reporting uprounds, shattering long-term failure statistics
09:4110.02.21
The announcement on Tuesday by Armis Inc. that it had raised a funding round at double the valuation it was sold at just a year ago is impressive, but it is far from unique. In fact, it is the tale of the times. According to figures revealed yesterday in a study by S-Cube and the Meitar law firm, the median value of Israeli companies in advanced stages (series D and later) has leaped by 70% in the past year.
According to the study, if in 2019 investors paid $1.3 million for every 1% of shares in a late-stage startup, this year they are paying $2.2 million for the same equity. In the first 40 days of 2021 several Israeli companies have managed to complete funding rounds at valuations of more than a billion dollars, including DriveNets that raised $280 million at a $1.3 billion valuation; Melio that raised $110 million at a valuation of $1.3 billion; and Rapyd, which raised $400 million at a valuation of $2.5 billion.

Printing dollars. Photo: Shutterstockצילום: שאטרסטוק
And indeed, the money being printed in the U.S. — nearly $3 trillion have been pumped into the market already and the Biden administration is expected to roll out a new capital injection — is bloating the valuation of companies in both the private and public markets. Members of the tech community can tell of companies that raised funding at a valuation of $10 million, only to conduct another round six months later, only this time at a valuation of $60 million. There were no substantive changes in the company’s business activity during that period, nor did it record a technological breakthrough. It is simply a matter of hyper-inflation.
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If you combine those figures with the fact that 73% of the capital invested in Israeli tech companies in 2020 was from foreign sources, mostly from the U.S., you get solid proof that while Israeli tech companies are soaring, they are doing so thanks to the freshly printed money coming out of the U.S.
This is of course good news for the Israeli economy that benefited from increased tech sector employment and exports, which to a large degree neutralized the economic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, but we mustn’t forget that while we deservedly pat ourselves on the back, part of the sense of wealth that we’re experiencing is fake and may run out quickly once the U.S. printing presses are shut down.

