In a positive sign for the IT industry, technology and healthcare were the two leading sectors for venture capital (VC) funding in the second quarter of 2010.

These two sectors acquired the lion’s share of private funding with $4.6 billion (£3 billion) of the $7.1 billion (£4.6 billion) total investment in US venture capital funding, according to a report by Dow Jones VentureSource.

Strong Quarter

By year-over-year comparison, investment in technology edged up to $1.6 billion (£1 billion) from $1.3 billion (£850 million) in 2009 and included 231 deals. The big winner was software as 156 deals collected just under a billion dollars at $905 million (£592 million) – a gain of $147 million (£96 million) from the same period last year.

“Fuelled by investors’ need to keep current portfolio companies funded and to begin investing from new funds, venture capital financing had a strong quarter,” said Jessica Canning, research director for VentureSource in a statement. “Deal activity and capital invested in venture-backed companies is once again near levels seen before the start of the economic recession in 2008.”

Health care startups gained more dollars than technology in the second quarter. Of that $4.6 billion between technology and health care, $2.7 billion (£1.7 billion) went to health care with $1.2 billion (£784 million) going toward biopharmaceutical companies.

“Venture investment in health care companies has gained momentum over the last several years, a trend that is likely to continue,” said Scott Austin, editor at VentureWire. “One catalyst for recent growth is venture firms placing a premium on drug development companies nearing commercialization, requiring large sums to get their drugs through Phase III trials.”

Energy Investments

Business, financial services and consumer information services all saw gains in venture deals. The business sector saw gains of $107 million (£70 million) from the same period last year fro a total of $814 million (£532 million); Consumer services earned $710 million (£464 million).

Another sector keeping pace with capital investment from 2009 is the energy sector which saw the largest individual deal of $350 million (£229 million) in Better Place, an electric-vehicle infrastructure company who makes batteries, charging systems, and storage networks. Better Place is lead by founder and CEO Shai Agassi who is a former SAP executive.

Two electric cars are expected to hit the market later this year including the Nissan Leaf and the Chevrolet Volt. A number of cities are jumping on the electrification bandwagon including Houston, Indianapolis, Memphis, Orlando, San Francisco and Seattle.

Don E. Sears eWEEK USA 2014. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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