From 2014-2019, participation in investment deals by angels appears to have declined overall,[1] but more sharply among individual angels (from a peak of 2,615 deals with individual angel participation in 2014 to 1,078 in 2019) than for angel groups (from a peak of 1,034 deals with group participation in 2014 to 615 in 2019).
Paralleling this decline in deal activity is a decrease in the number of different angels (individuals or groups) participating in deals in any given year, which has dropped by about half since 2014 and 2015 to 2,483 in 2019. Both trends suggest that angel investing is trending away from individuals and toward groups.
The report provides an analysis of how startups financed with investment from an initial angel or VC round in 2006-2014 fared through up to six additional investment rounds as of July 2020. When looking at the difference between angel- and VC- backed companies when raising a second round, nearly three-quarters of angel-backed companies raise additional investment and 10 percent have failed at this stage, while about 60 percent of VC-backed companies raise additional funds and 15 percent have failed. As those companies advanced through a possible seventh round, companies with initial angel investment are nearly twice as likely to still be seeking investment (8 percent v. 4 percent) and less likely to have exited (29 percent v. 32 percent), although they are also less likely to have failed (22 percent v. 26 percent).
Of course, a company that begins with an angel round would be expected to be at an earlier stage of its development than a company that begins with VC, so these outcomes should not necessarily be viewed as an indictment of the companies, angel investors or angel investing.