Venture capital investment in Minnesota down 63% in first half of year

Medical device companies are getting the most money, but higher interest rates and bank closures have cooled investment off recent record years.

July 28, 2023 at 1:05PM
Parallax CEO Tom O’Neil, right, with company leaders Amanda Anderson and Dave Annis. The company raised $12 million in June to grow its software that predicts workloads. (Elizabeth Flores, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Medical device and health technology companies raised the most capital in Minnesota through the first six months of 2023, though overall deal value is down 63%.

Minnesota companies raised $437 million in the first two quarters of the year, compared with $1.2 billion in the same period in 2022, according to investment tracker PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association.

Deal value in Minnesota has cooled since record numbers seen in 2021 and 2022, when high valuations of young companies drove deals upward. Numbers have since leveled to pre-pandemic numbers, experts said.

Through the first half of 2019, Minnesota companies raised $445.9 million from venture investors.

Across the U.S., companies raised $85.6 billion in venture capital through the first half of the year. For perspective, in 2022, companies raised a total of $246.5 billion, and in 2021, a record $347.5 billion.

Federal interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, and the closure of banks that back venture-based companies, like Silicon Valley Bank, impacted the venture capital landscape in the U.S. through the first six months of 2023, experts from PitchBook and NVCA report. Meanwhile, investors are seeking better returns on their investments, instead of continuously pumping additional rescue capital into companies that should have already gone public offering or found a buyer.

Minnesota venture fund managers predicted earlier this year companies would see less cash coming their way this year, with investors becoming more selective, as well as less capital being available amid speculations of a recession.

Still, several Minnesota companies were able to raise capital from venture capital firms.

Minneapolis-based Flywheel in June closed on $54.3 million in a Series D financing round, valuing the company at $254 million, according to investment tracker Pitchbook and the National Venture Capital Association. Investors included Microsoft. Flywheel developed a cloud-based research platform used by clinical researchers and pharmaceutical companies.

Edina-based Relievant Medsystems, the maker of a system used to treat chronic low back pain, raised $50 million in a Series G round of funding in April, signaling the company's eighth capital raise since its formation in 2006 and valuing the company at $350 million, per PitchBook.

Other companies that raised large rounds of capital include Edina-based software firm Parallax, which closed on $12 million to further develop its software that predicts workload.

about the writer

about the writer

Nick Williams

Prep Sports Team Leader

Nick Williams is the High School Sports Team Leader at the Minnesota Star Tribune. He joined the Star Tribune as a business reporter in 2021. Prior to his eight years as a business reporter in Minnesota and Wisconsin, he was a sportswriter for 12 years in Florida and New York.

See More

More from Business

card image
FILE -- President Donald Trump signs the tax reform bill in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Dec. 22, 2017. Republicans are pouring government stimulus into a steadily strengthening economy, adding economic fuel at a moment when unemployment is low and wages are beginning to rise, a combination that is stoking fears of higher inflation and ballooning budget deficits. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)