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Study: Investments up in 4th quarter

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SAN FRANCISCO - Venture capitalists emerged from the dot-com debris to finance more fresh ideas late last year, helping to lift quarterly investments in startups for the first time since the Internet bubble burst, according to a study to be released Monday. <br> <br> Startups across the country received $7.1 billion in venture capital during the fourth quarter, a 2 percent improvement from the third quarter, based on statistics collected for the National Venture Capital Association by PricewaterhouseCoopers and Venture Economics. <br> <br> It marked the first time venture capital volume climbed from the previous quarter since the industry showered entrepreneurs with $26.3 billion during the three months that ended June 2000. <br> <br> Around the same time, the stock market began to shun unprofitable dot-coms that venture capitalists had nurtured in previous years, triggering a painful shakeout. The fourth-quarter bounce may signal the early stages of a turnaround, according to venture capital experts. <br> <br> ``We have bottomed out and are clearly on the road to recovery,&#39;&#39; said John Taylor, vice president of research for the National Venture Capital Association, the industry&#39;s main trade group. <br> <br> Despite the fourth-quarter uptick, venture capital investment continued its drastic decline on a year-to-year basis. The fourth-quarter activity represented a 67 percent drop from the $20.9 billion invested during the same period in 2000. <br> <br> For all of 2001, venture capitalists invested $36.5 billion, a 63 percent decline from a $99.6 billion spree in 2000. The 2000 figure lowers the National Venture Capital Association&#39;s previous estimate of $104 billion for that year. <br> <br> The revision resulted from the trade group&#39;s decision to use joint data compiled by PricewaterhouseCoopers and Venture Economics, which previously released competing surveys. <br> <br> Many venture capitalists said they believe they can build on the modest momentum of last year&#39;s final quarter. <br> <br> ``I wouldn&#39;t say we are much above the bottom, but at least it doesn&#39;t feel like we are going back down again,&#39;&#39; said Gregory Sands, general partner of Sutter Hill Ventures in Palo Alto. <br> <br> As they re-enter the fray, venture capitalists are focusing more on biotechnology. The $1 billion that venture capitalists invested in biotech startups during the final three months of 2001 represented a quarterly record for the sector. <br> <br> Biotech accounted for 14 percent of all venture capital investments in the fourth quarter. In contrast, the $867.6 million invested in biotech during the fourth quarter of 2000 accounted for 4 percent of the total volume. <br> <br> Plenty of venture capital remains to be invested. Venture capitalists started the year with about $50 billion at their disposal, estimated Jesse Reyes, a vice president for Venture Economics. <br> <br> The surplus is one reason venture capitalists aren&#39;t raising as much money as they were a few years ago. Rattled by heavy losses in the high technology industry last year, institutional investors also are trimming their venture capital portfolios. <br> <br> With those forces at work, venture capitalists in the fourth quarter raised $9 billion for future investments, a 65 percent decline from the prior year, according to VentureOne, another industry research firm. For all of 2001, venture capital fund-raising totaled $48.2 billion, down 47 percent from the prior year, VentureOne said. <br> <br> While the worst may be over for the industry, more pain could lie ahead. Many major firms still haven&#39;t recognized the drastic declines of their investments made during 1999 and 2000.
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