European internet startup companies have attracted twice the level of
investment across the second financial quarter of 2007, compared with the
equivalent period last year.
According to data from equity research
firm Library House, €150m was invested in new European web-based firms, a
steep increase from the €51m spent in the first quarter of the year, and the
€64m of venture capital supplied in the second quarter of 2006.
Among the most successful new companies was
Joost, the new IPTV (Internet Protocol
Television) project from Janus Friis and Niklas Zennström, the founders of
Skype. Joost brought in €33m in outside investment.
The increased figures for online ventures contrast with the decreasing
numbers for overall funding, suggesting that investors may once more regard the
web as potentially fertile ground. The overall total for European investment
stands at €1.4bn, down over 17 per cent from 2006.
The UK retained its place at top of Library House's venture capital league
for Europe, having attracted €392m. France fared the worst on a national level,
with venture investment dropping to just under €100m – less than half the amount
from the previous year.
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