Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (2024)

Julie RuvoloContributor

Julie Ruvolo, a former writer for TechCrunch, is the head of editorial content for the Latin American Private Equity and Venture Capital Association.

More posts by this contributor

  • Why have some of Silicon Valley’s top investors started investing in Latin America?
  • UPDATE: Brazilian Judge Shuts Down WhatsApp And Brazil’s Congress Wants To Shut Down The Social Web Next

Latin America just might be the most overlooked emerging market on the planet.

The venture dollars in Latin America can’t hold a candle to India or China (compare China’s $11.8 billion in new VC funds for the first half of 2016, down 14 percent according the WSJ, to Latin America’s $218 million), and the region’s 600 million inhabitants get overlooked by investors who think that you need to reach a billion users to be a “real startup.”

But with debut investments from Andreessen Horowitz (Colombia), Founders Fund and Sequoia Capital (Brazil) and QED (Mexico and Brazil), that appears to be changing.

I spent the last couple of years writing about Latin American investments for TechCrunch, covering rounds in startups like VivaReal,PSafe, ComparaOnline and Descomplica, and interviewing some of the leading local investorsin the region, like KaszeK Ventures, founded by the wildly successful MercadoLibre team, and Redpoint e.Ventures, a joint venture between Redpoint and e.Ventures, obviously.

Let me lay out the opportunity as local investors see it:

  • The internet population is set to double from 300 million to 600 million.

  • Half the population isn’t part of the banking system (and only 15 percent of Mexicans even have a credit card).

  • And pretty much everyone is coming online via inexpensive Androids.

Also worth noting is that Brazil, with only half of its 200 million inhabitants online, is already the No. 2 or No. 3 audience on every major social platform globally. And depending on whose data you’re looking at, Brazilians spend more time online than any other population. (Bizarre to think it all started with Orkut.)

How about the venture data? VC investments have been steadily climbing over the past five years, and 2015 was a banner year, with$594 milliondeployed over 182 deals, despite back-to-back economic and political crises in Brazil, the region’s leading venture market in terms of both fundraising and investment dollars.

And VC transactions in Latin America are up 46 percent year over year, according to mid-year data from the Latin American Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (LAVCA), a nonprofit supported by Omidyar Network (where I’m working).

So for those of you who think there “isn’t much going on” south of the border, here are a few investment trends I’m tuning into:

Top Silicon Valley firms are making their first investments in the region

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (1)

Just in 2016, we’ve seen Andreessen Horowitz make their first LatAm investment in Rappi, a Colombian grocery delivery service.

Founders Fund also made their LatAm debut with investments in Jusbrasil, a legal platform, and fintech startup Nubank. Nubank has raised $80 millionover the past year from Founders Fund, Sequoia Capital (in their first Brazilian investment), Tiger Global, KaszeK Ventures and QED Investors, followed by a $52 milliondebt investment by Goldman Sachs earlier this year.

Goldman also led a $10 millioninvestment in Brazilian logistics startup CargoX this year, with participation from Valor Capital and Uber co-founder Oscar Salazar.

In Mexico, Accel Partners and QED Investors have made their debut investments: Accel participated in a $6.7 millionSeries A in Mexican grocery shopping service Cornershop, led by ALLVP, one of the region’s most active VCs, and QED joined KaszeK, Quona Capital, Accion Frontier Inclusion Fund and Mexican firm Jaguar Ventures in an $8 millionSeries A in lending platform Konfio.

Mexico out-fundraised Brazil for the first time in 2015

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (2)

Mexico also led the region in terms of deal count for the first time in 1H2016, with 47 transactions (up 4.2X from 1H2015), largely stimulated by capital made available by government agencies Fondo de Fondos and the National Institute of the Entrepreneur (INADEM) over the last few years.

(Brazil’s VC ecosystem had a similar jump-start with government funding from BNDES and FINEP; also worth noting is that Susana Garcia-Robles at FOMIN, the Multilateral Investment Fund, has personally led anchor investments in more than 70 funds in the region.)

For now, fintech dominates as the leading sector of venture investment in Latin America

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (3)

Fintech represents29 percentof IT investments (in terms of total dollars invested) in 2015, and 40 percentof IT investments in 1H2016. In Mexico, in addition to Konfio, lending platform Kueski raised $10 millionfrom CrunchFund, Rise Capital, Variv Capital and others (plus another $25 millionin debt). In Brazil, the IFC led a $15 millionSeries C in GuiaBolso with KaszeK Ventures, Ribbit Capital and QED Investors. Interesting to note is that since half the region’s population is unbanked, pretty much every fintech startup is having a direct or inadvertent impact on financial inclusion.

Agtech is starting to heat up, with big investments from Monsanto, Qualcomm and BASF

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (4)

Brazil is the No. 2 agribusiness market globally behind the U.S., but agtech is a massively underserved sector in LatAm, accounting for less than 1 percentof venture investment in Latin America since 2011. That appears to be changing: Monsanto is investing up to $92 millionin BR Startups, a Brazilian agtech fund managed by Microsoft in collaboration with Qualcomm Ventures.

Qualcomm Ventures also launched a program to get a drone on every farm in Brazil (there are over 2 million). And German pesticide giant BASF just launched agtech accelerator Agrostart.

Brazilian mobile conglomerate Movile is on an acquisition tear

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (5)

There isn’t much in the way of publicly available data on digital M&A transactions in LatAm (we’re working on it), but Movile appears to be the most active acquirer in the region right now.

Fresh off a$30 millionSeries F, Movile subsidiary iFood, the region’s leading on-demand food delivery startup, acquired SpoonRocket — their 15th acquisition in less than two years.

And Rappido, Movile’s on-demand delivery and distribution service, is gaining traction in Mexico on the heels of a merger with 99Motos, their Brazilian competitor.

All eyes are on Argentina

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (6)

With newly elected President Mauricio Macri in office, Argentina is organizing a series of structural changes to facilitate new company creation.

Macri and National Secretary of Entrepreneurship Mariano Mayer just announced a package of laws to foster entrepreneurship and new company creation: Ley del Emprendedor would allow entrepreneurs to register and open a company online within 24 hours; Ley de Sociedades de Beneficio de Interés Colectivo would be the region’s first legislation to define and recognize businesses with sustainable environmental or social impacts.

There are also plans for the creation of 10 new funds to provide entrepreneurs access to capital (three will receive US$30 million each by year’s end), and legislation to allow crowdfunding. Similar legislative projects to encourage new company creation are also underway in Mexico City and Brazil.

Read up on Latin America’s venture fundraising and investment data, most active local and international investors and biggest deals, in LAVCA’s Five Year Trends report. To follow VC deals as they happen, subscribe to LAVCA’s bi-weekly LatAm Venture Bulletin.

Why have some of Silicon Valley's top investors started investing in Latin America? | TechCrunch (2024)

FAQs

Why are some Silicon Valley based VC companies finding Latin American countries attractive? ›

The region has become attractive to investors who see the young, underserved population, growing internet infrastructure, and rising middle class as a blue ocean opportunity.

Who are the largest investors in Latin America? ›

The United States, Spain and the Netherlands remained the largest investors in the region in 2021.

Which country invests the most in Latin America? ›

Who is investing in Latin America and the Caribbean? The United States represented the largest segment of foreign investors with 38% of total investments, followed by the European Union with 17%.

Why outsource to Latin America? ›

It's simple: By outsourcing non-core competencies, companies can benefit from the same quality of work at a lower cost. Latin American countries generally have lower living costs, which translates into lower labor costs compared to the United States.

Why do you think Silicon Valley has so many similar companies? ›

Why do competitors line up next to each other in close proximity? Because people prefer variety and choices, and this applies to consumers, workers, entrepreneurs, and businesspeople. It is easy to build infrastructure facilitating similar businesses. Silicon Valley is a destination on its own.

Who owns most of Silicon Valley? ›

Part 1: Who Owns Silicon Valley? Stanford University, Apple, Google, Cisco, Intel and several real estate companies are among Silicon Valley's top property owners according to an analysis of Santa Clara County assessor records for 2018.

Who plays the investor in Silicon Valley? ›

Stephen Tobolowsky as "Action" Jack Barker (season 4; recurring season 3), briefly CEO of Pied Piper and later Hooli. Chris Diamantopoulos as Russ Hanneman (seasons 4 & 6; recurring season 2–3; guest season 5), a brash, loud and fiery billionaire investor who provides Pied Piper with their Series A.

Who owned most of Latin America? ›

The peoples of this large area shared the experience of conquest and colonization by the Spaniards and Portuguese from the late 15th through the 18th century as well as movements of independence from Spain and Portugal in the early 19th century.

What is the richest company in Latin America? ›

Latin American companies with highest market cap 2024

As of March 2024, Petrobras, a state-owned Brazilian multinational corporation in the petroleum industry, was the largest public company in Latin America, with a market capitalization of nearly 109 billion U.S. dollars.

Why invest in Latin America? ›

LAC has a young population, many new investments in renewable energy, an immense and growing role in global food supply, a rich ecosystem of entrepreneurial capital and powershoring to meet the growing needs of companies to green up production.

Where do the rich live in Latin America? ›

Latin America's luxury real estate market remains a bastion of wealth, with Puerto Madero in Argentina, Del Valle in Mexico and Ipanema in Brazil holding the top spots for costliest neighborhoods.

What Latin American country has the most millionaires? ›

In absolute terms, the economies with the most millionaires are Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Peru, Colombia, and Argentina.

What makes some Silicon Valley companies so successful? ›

The innovation secrets of Silicon Valley aren't that secret. The region has been thriving because it has cultivated a culture of innovation, encouraged creativity and risk-taking, supported early-stage startups, and encouraged collaboration.

Why is Silicon Valley so attractive? ›

Silicon Valley is renowned the world over as the ultimate hub for tech startups and innovation. The area has many advantages that make it attractive for entrepreneurs looking to start a business, including access to venture capital, a highly educated workforce, and a culture of risk-taking.

Why Silicon Valley is known as the major hubs of the IT industry in the world? ›

Silicon Valley is home to many of the world's largest high-tech corporations, including the headquarters of more than 30 businesses in the Fortune 1000, and thousands of startup companies.

What is the Silicon Valley of United States of America famous for? ›

Silicon Valley is a global center of technological innovation located in the South San Francisco Bay Area of California. The area was named after the primary material found in computer microprocessors. Silicon Valley is home to dozens of major technology, software, and internet companies.

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