The engine of Silicon Valley’s success has long been its ability to generate continuous innovation. Venture capitalists (VCs) invest in startups, and these startups, in turn, use that funding to acquire other startups. This accelerates growth and fuels innovation. Larger technology companies also join the fray, purchasing startups to onboard talent and acquire innovative technologies. This creates a cycle: Startups eventually achieve an exit, returning capital to the VCs, who can then invest in the next generation of startups. This process has expanded the scope of innovation with each iteration.
Data from the recent Mind the Bridge and Crunchbase report, “The End of the Startup M&A Era? Tech Startup M&A 2024 Report,” which analyzes startup acquisitions by Fortune Global 500 companies since the beginning of the millennium, supports this dynamic. The report indicates that six of the world’s top ten startup acquirers are based in Silicon Valley (seven if Microsoft is included). Furthermore, North American companies acquire startups at four times the rate of European companies, and the gap with Southeast Asian companies is even wider, with North American firms acquiring between seven and ten times more.
However, this established pattern may be shifting.
A Market in Transition
Since 2021, there’s been a decrease in global startup M&A activity. While the “VC pullback” plays a role, this may signal a more fundamental and lasting adjustment within the market, rather than a temporary slowdown. Governments worldwide are asserting greater control over M&A, especially in the tech sector. This trend is driven by increasing geopolitical tensions and renewed protectionist policies. Large acquisitions, such as the proposed multi-billion dollar Adobe–Figma deal, are now subject to increased scrutiny.
Political pressure is mounting against market concentration and the formation of monopolies. Simultaneously, there is a growing need to safeguard technologies deemed critical to national security. The tech and healthcare sectors, traditionally active in M&A, now face tighter regulatory scrutiny. Moreover, rising geopolitical tensions are also extending the focus to dual-use technologies and defense tech, resulting in heightened government oversight of industrial defense assets and policies. The growing focus on regulatory aspects threatens to impact the current VC and startup landscape.
These changing conditions could reshape the venture capital landscape.
This trend was highlighted in the recently published report “The Future of European Competitiveness” by Mario Draghi. If these trends continue, it could significantly affect Silicon Valley’s innovation engine, impacting the entire startup ecosystem. As Mind the Bridge aptly puts it, “no exit, no party.”

Alberto Onetti is the chairman of Mind the Bridge.