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Q2 venture funding climbs on AI deals while PE stuck on sidelines

July 8, 2025
11:22 AM
7 min read
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Private equity fundraising in the first half remains slow.

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7 min read

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cryptocurrency

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Published

July 8, 2025

11:22 AM

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Fortune

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S·Term SheetQ2 venture funding climbs on AI deals while PE stuck on sidelinesBY Luisa BeltranBY Luisa BeltranFinance ReporterLuisa BeltranFinance ReporterLuisa Beltran is a finance reporter at Fortune where she covers private equity, Wall Street, and fin M&A

SEE FULL BIO Mark Zuckerberg is founder and CEO of Meta

Getty ImagesGreetings, Term Sheeters

This is finance reporter Luisa Beltran, subbing for Allie

It’s time to take the temperature of the venture and private equity sectors, and we’ve got some new numbers

VC in startups is on the upswing, with venture firms pouring $91 billion into companies during the second quarter, a roughly 11% increase year over year, according to data and predictive intelligence firm Crunchbase

Second quarter’s $91 billion represents a 20% drop from the first quarter when startups raised $114 billion

However, Q1 was the strongest quarter for venture investment since Q2 2022. (First quarter also included OpenAI’s $40 billion financing, the largest private round ever. ) Nearly half of Q2’s $91 billion came from one sector: AI, which kicked in $40 billion. (Meta’s $14. 3 billion investment in Scale AI in June generated more than one-third of AI sector funding. ) Healthcare and bio came in second with $14. 8 billion in funding, while financial services dered $11. 3 billion for third place. “Global funding has increased year over year for the past three quarters, driven primarily by billion-dollar-plus rounds into AI re labs as well as data and infrastructure viders in the sector,” Crunchbase said in the report

Nearly one-third of all capital in Q2 went to 16 companies—including Anduril Industries’ $2. 5 billion round, and the separate $2 billion fund rounds for Thinking Machine Labs and Safe Superintelligence

Startup M&A was also active

Q2 saw $50 billion in reported exit value, the second strongest quarter since 2021

The total was down from $71 billion in the first quarter, which included Google’s $32 billion buy of Wiz

OpenAI was the most active and largest acquirer of startups in Q2, scooping up four companies, including Jony Ive’s io for $6 billion and Windsurf for $3 billion

PE on the sidelines On the private equity side of things, fundraising among PE firms continues to drag

Global PE funds have collected $223 billion so far in 2025, on pace to fall short of last year’s performance, when PE pools accumulated $551 billion for all of 2024, according to re and data firm PitchBook

US funds have raised $149 billion so far in 2025, also below last year’s pace, when PE pools collected $333

The slowdown in PE fundraising is due to fewer mergers and a decline in IPOs

PE firms have struggled to sell their investments, which means they can’t send money back to their investors and this causes their own fundraising to stall

PE firms entered 2025 expecting a strong year, or at least a rebound, in mergers

But volatility due to President Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs caused many deals and IPOs to be put on hold in April

While new issues began rebounding in June, M&A remains sluggish

Private equity managers have more than $1 trillion in dry powder, or uninvested, committed capital, according to Kyle Walters, private equity re analyst at PitchBook

Many PE firms are “[sitting] on the sidelines, choosing not to sell most of their assets in what they deem to be an unfavorable exit market,” Walters said. (The PE dry powder total figure is as of Sept. 30, 2024, and has ly dropped since then, Walters said

Venture firms had $701. 2 billion in uninvested capital, he said. ) So far in 2025, PE funds have clinched $339. 8 billion in total exit value, which is on pace to surpass last year’s total of $384

A handful of large deals, including natural gas exporter Venture Global’s $58. 7 billion IPO and WorldPay’s $24. 3 billion sale to Global Payments, have helped boost exit value this year. “We need to see a strong pick-up in terms of exit count if we want to see the fundraising slowdown come to an end

And given that most exit activity is in a wait-and-see mode, you ly won’t see fundraising activity pick back up until 2026,” Walters said

See you Wednesday, Luisa BeltranX: @LuisaRBeltran: luisa

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Sara Braun curated the deals section of today’s

One, a Berlin-based enterprise loyalty and motion software company, raised $135 million in funding

Silversmith Capital Partners and Meri Partners led the round and were joined by existing investor CRV. - CarOnSale, a Berlin-based B2B marketplace for used car trading, raised €70 million ($82 million) in Series C funding

Northzone led the round and was joined by existing investors HV Capital, Insight Partners, Stripes, and Creandum. - QEDMA, a Tel Aviv-based quantum computing company, raised $26 million in Series A funding

Glilot Capital Partners led the round and was joined by IBM, Korea Investment Partners, existing investor TPY Capital, and others. - Bumo, a Pasadena, Calif. -based child care marketplace, raised $10 million in seed funding

Offline Ventures and True Ventures led the fund and were joined by Goodwater Capital, Marketplace Capital, and others. - Fantasy Life, a New York City-based online sports and gaming company, raised $7 million in seed funding

LRMR Ventures and SC Holdings led the round and were joined by Eberg Capital, Bolt Ventures, Wasserman Ventures, and others. - BridgePort, a New York City-based middleware software vider for crypto trading, raised $3. 2 million in seed funding

Further Ventures led the round and was joined by Virtu, XBTO, Blockchain Founders Fund, Fun Fair Ventures, and Humla Ventures

Private Equity- Thoma Bravo agreed to acquire Olo, a New York City-based SaaS restaurant platform, in an all-cash deal valuing the company at apximately $2 billion. -Tikehau Capital raised €1 billion ($1. 17 billion) for its portfolio company Egis, a Paris-based architectural and civil engineering firm. -Development Partners International, agreed to acquire a $190 million minority stake in Alameda Healthcare, an Cairo-based private healthcare group. - TEAM nologies, backed by Arlington Capital Partners, acquired Duke Empirical, a Morgan Hill, Calif. -based developer and manufacturer of cardiovascular medical devices

Financial terms were not disclosed. -ORIX USA, a subsidiary of Japan-based ORIX Corporation, agreed to acquire a majority stake in Hilco Global, a Northbrook, Ill. -based diversified financial services company

Financial terms were not disclosed

Exits- The Chamberlain Group, backed by Blackstone, agreed to acquire Arrow Tru-Line, an Archbold, Ohio-based manufacturer and supplier of garage door hardware, from MiddleGround Capital

Financial terms were not disclosed

OTHER- TPG Capital acquired a 70% stake in DIRECTV, an El Segundo, Calif-based satellite television company, from AT&T for $7. 6 billion in cash. - Lightcast acquired Rhetorik, a Wokingham, U. -based B2B organizational intelligence and data vider

Financial terms were not disclosed

FUNDS + FUNDS OF FUNDS-Red Dot Capital Partners, a Tel Aviv-based venture capital firm, raised $320 million for its third fund focused on early-stage growth companies across various sectors

PEOPLE-Olympus Partners, a Stamford, Conn. -based private equity firm, moted Matt Bujor to principal, Connor Wood to principal, Courtney Dunne to vice president, and Marty Durkin to vice president. -Par, a Paris-based venture capital firm, moted Alison Imbert to partner, Moritz Steinbrecher to principal, and Ariadne Lemieux-Cumberlege to senior associate on the Seed team

The firm moted Simone Riva to partner and Julia Najman to senior associate on the Venture team. -Stonepeak, a New York City-based private equity firm, added Cindy Marrs as a senior advisor

Previously, she was at Wellington Management

This is the web version of Term Sheet, a daily on the biggest deals and dealmakers in venture capital and private equity.