In October, startup funding saw a significant surge, with nine companies each securing $500 million or more, marking it as the second-most active month for large funding rounds in the past two years. Venture investors globally injected $39 billion into both early and late-stage startups, a rise from $34 billion the previous year, although slightly down from September’s $51 billion. Notably, startups outside Silicon Valley led the largest funding deals, with New York-based companies Reflection.ai and Polymarket each raising $2 billion. Other substantial rounds included Denver’s Crusoe Energy Systems with $1.4 billion and Austin’s Base Power with $1 billion. China and India also saw notable increases in startup funding, with China reaching $3.9 billion and India $1.5 billion. The U.S. maintained its lead, contributing 60% of global funding. AI continued to dominate, receiving 38% of investments, while healthcare and biotech followed closely. Blockchain, crypto, and energy sectors also experienced significant year-over-year growth. October also saw a rise in startup valuations, with OpenAI reaching a $500 billion valuation. Despite the reopening of IPO markets, the largest tech IPO, Navan, faced a challenging debut.

