The Astounding Growth of Chinese VC—and the Tech It’s Flowing Into

Over the course of the next month, I will be releasing a series of China-centered articles, leading up to my webinar with Dr. Kai-Fu Lee, one of the most plugged-in AI investors on the planet and of the technology’s earliest pioneers.

In the next four weeks, we’ll be covering everything from China’s surging tech investments and the drivers behind China’s growing dominance in AI, to an early look at Kai-Fu Lee’s soon-to-be-released AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley and the New World Order.

Today, let’s dive into Chinese venture capital abroad.

Of the $154 billion worth of VC invested in 2017, 40 percent came from Asian (primarily Chinese) VCs. America’s share? Only 4 percentage points higher at 44 percent.

In a great push to access intellectual property and drive growth in key tech sectors, China’s VC scene is booming.

Despite a looming trade war and Chinese government restrictions on capital outflow, China-based VC funds and corporate investments continue to pump vast new sums into everything from global biotech startups to AI-equipped robotics.

Now the second-largest VC market in the world, China’s VC fundraising nearly doubled between 2015 and 2017, in large part driven by the fruition of China’s internet universe and mounting government efforts.

This astounding growth is part of China’s explosion in private equity. But while many of these funds used to be poured into thousands of Chinese copycat companies and local tech startups, we’re seeing a dramatic outward shift in China’s biggest investments.

Let’s take a look at the increasingly international nature of startups backed by Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent (BAT), for instance. As Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent take on global leadership in AI, autonomous vehicles, and personalized medicine, China’s corporate VC targets are getting an even split between China and the rest of the world.

And as I’ll discuss in a future post, China’s government aims to be the global leader in AI by 2030, a task which requires mass absorption of foreign expertise and foreign data.

Leveraging tremendous government-backed guiding funds and state-corporate collaborations, Beijing can now help bring the world’s top tech talent and intellectual property back to the mainland.

With a heavy focus on AI, Chinese VC firms are targeting three major arenas:

  1. Robotics
  2. Driverless vehicles
  3. Biotech

Back on the mainland, China’s ultra-high-powered startup ecosystem pioneers the world’s greatest supply of high-tech hardware and newly deployable algorithms. And now sharing the wealth, Chinese VC abroad plays a critical role in picking out the most promising collaborators to learn from at home and work with abroad.

Robotics

Shenzhen’s Maker Movement puts China in the unequivocal lead when it comes to hardware manufacturing. With some of the most industrious (not to mention numerous) electronics engineers in the world, Shenzhen provides a huge leg up to Chinese robotics startups that need to iterate fast.

It’s this unparalleled turnaround rate that in part makes Chinese VC support so attractive to global hardware-reliant startups. And it’s why savvy Chinese VC funds and investors will often give small US startups of interest a critical gateway to Shenzhen’s abundant resources.

As we start to witness the rise of next-gen technologies like intelligent robots and autonomous drones, this access will be critical, and Chinese VCs will score top global market access in this emerging new sector.

Already in 2016, China accounted for 35 percent of the world’s robot-related patent filings, and Chinese investment has amounted to at least $10 billion per year.

Autonomous Vehicles

As I’ll discuss in a future post on Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, these three tech behemoths are forming a “national team,” with Baidu heading up China’s initiative in driverless cars.

Aiming to decimate traffic congestion and build new AI cities, China has a vested interest in the rapid deployment of AI behind autonomous transit.

Added to the mix is the fact that autonomous vehicles are one of China’s weakest points. Given its reliance on elite AI expertise (quality > quantity), a luxury still concentrated at Western juggernauts like Google, autonomous vehicle rollout in China will need as much foreign assistance as it can get.

And as seen here, BAT is investing significantly in auto tech, each company announcing its own autonomous driving initiative.

Baidu, for instance, officially announced its Apollo ecosystem last year, reportedly the first comprehensive opening up of automated driving technology and deep learning data.

Bringing on global partners from Nvidia to Renesas, Baidu has surpassed 10,000 developers on the project’s GitHub repository, claiming to be the most vibrant AV platform vendor in the industry.

Combining open-software and cloud-service platforms, Apollo strives to enable any automotive partner to efficiently build out their own autonomous vehicles system. And as more partners get on board, Apollo expects to amass significant driving data, speeding up AV technology deployment.

But BAT isn’t stopping at open-source platforms to learn from partner data. Alibaba’s Innovation Ventures (the company’s VC investment arm), for instance, recently participated in a $30 million Series B funding round for Israeli vehicle-to-vehicle networking tech startup Nexar.

Biotech

In line with BAT’s third most heavily-backed category, China is investing big in biotech.

In the first half of this year, China-based VC funds poured $5.1 billion into private US biotech firms, surpassing 2017’s record $4 billion. This indicates a major shift in China’s healthcare-oriented focus.

Among the Chinese investors, Tencent and Baidu Ventures made a joint investment in American deep learning-based drug discovery startup Atomwise. And of Baidu’s five other US deals, the company’s VC arm invested in healthcare AI startup Engine Biosciences.

Just as China has worked its way from a largely ‘copycat’ tech ecosystem to a thriving hub of innovation and cutting-edge research, Beijing is trying to do the same in healthcare. By investing big in foreign (particularly AI-based) biotech, China aims to shrug off its reputation as a low-grade generic pharmaceuticals manufacturer and begin pioneering novel therapies.

Given China’s enormous population and overwhelmed medical institutions, predictive analytics and personalized medicine could unleash dramatic economic value. And as biotech emerges as one of the most profitable and disruptive technologies, Chinese VCs may soon help the country cash in.

Final Thoughts

China is a true miracle story. After reaping the harvest of a cheap manufacturing sector and export-oriented economy, China is upending traditional investment flows at a rate previously unheard of.

Diving into everything from autonomous drones to AI-driven diagnostics, Chinese VC firms are gaining a hold of global markets everywhere, amping up China’s access to elite tech expertise and valuable new data.

And as international startups position themselves to take advantage of China’s strategic generosity, these Chinese giants will both solidify growing influence at home and technological dominance abroad.

Image Credit: Sean Xu / Shutterstock.com

Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MDhttp://diamandis.com/
Diamandis is the founder and executive chairman of the XPRIZE Foundation, which leads the world in designing and operating large-scale incentive competitions. He is also the executive founder and director of Singularity University, a global learning and innovation community using exponential technologies to tackle the world’s biggest challenges and build a better future for all. As an entrepreneur, Diamandis has started over 20 companies in the areas of longevity, space, venture capital, and education. He is also co-founder of BOLD Capital Partners, a venture fund with $250M investing in exponential technologies. Diamandis is a New York Times Bestselling author of two books: Abundance and BOLD. He earned degrees in molecular genetics and aerospace engineering from MIT and holds an MD from Harvard Medical School. Peter’s favorite saying is “the best way to predict the future is to create it yourself.”
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