French Startups Are Pulling in Record Funds—And Catching Up the U.K.

(Bloomberg) -- In 2017, when newly elected French President Emmanuel Macron said, “I want France to be a startup nation,” his detractors used his phrase to mock him.

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If anything, France was struggling to attract venture capital, with the annual number of investments into startups falling in 2016, lagging both the U.K. and Germany, according to data from Pitchbook.

Now fledgling French companies are raking in investor funds. On a record-setting day in September, two French technology startups -- Sorare and Mirakl -- together raised more than $1 billion. In the past weeks, fintech Swile drew $200 million in a funding round led by SoftBank, and the same amount was raised by ed-tech company 360learning. Already, the number of tech unicorns -- companies valued at over $1 billion -- stands at 20, well on track to surpass Macron’s target for 25 such firms by 2025.

“The objective will be met by the end of the year,” billionaire Xavier Niel, a keen investor of the sector, said in an interview. He funds around 100 startups at the seed stage every year through his investment vehicle Kima Ventures. “I think we should be talking about decacorns now,” or companies with valuations over $10 billion.

After decades of trying and failing to leverage its engineering and technology skills, a new generation of business founders in France may finally be finding a Silicon Valley-style momentum building. In the first six months this year, technology startups set a record, raising almost as much as they did in all of last year -- 5.14 billion euros ($6 billion) compared with 5.39 billion, according to EY’s first-half venture capital barometer.

In 2020, France’s tech firms amassed the same amount of funding as their German counterparts for the first time. But they still trail those in the U.K., where startups raised almost three times as much in the first half of the year, a fact Cedric O, France’s minister for Digital, shrugs off.

If French momentum keeps up, “London will have reasons to worry in the long run,” he said in an interview.

The minister attributes France’s recent success to lobbying by Macron’s government, such as inviting investors every year to the Elysee Palace and organizing “Choose France” tech summits in Versailles. And the proof is a slew of steps taken to address their concerns, he said.