3i repeats its exit from early stage, now to the FT
March 25 Mike Butcher
Nice to see the Financial Times catching up on a story I first broke in January and confirmed in February, namely that private equity house 3i is abandoning early-stage investing in start-up companies.
It’s a hard fall. In early 2000 it managed 750 technology investments valued at £2.4bn ($4.8bn) – half its portfolio – and was seeking to compete with the top venture capitalists in Silicon Valley. By September 2007, its VC assets had fallen to £734m, less than a tenth of its total portfolio.
I hope this is not some kind of attempt at a press relations strategy to presage a pull-out from its few remaining portfolio startups, like Taptu.
N.B. Kudos to The Guardian for recognising the scoop.


Comments
March 31st, 2008 at 7:09 pm
Does this mean they are battening down the hatches Mike? Can you explain why you think they’re doing this - I kinda get it but remain unsure about the ‘why’.
March 31st, 2008 at 7:48 pm
Short answer: Too many startups, not enough ‘quality’, lack of exits (IPO, big sale etc), doesn’t fit with wider 3i group.