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Last week, we reported that Finnish companies received the most private equity (PE) investments in Europe relative to GDP in 2023. Let’s dig deeper into the details.
In 2023, Finland stood out as one of the few European countries attracting more capital relative to GDP than in the previous five years on average. The total equity amount invested in European companies dropped 25% from the previous year and 11% below the five-year average. In contrast, investments in Finnish companies remained stable year-on-year, which propelled us to the number one spot.
When breaking down private equity into subsectors, Finnish companies’ ability to attract capital ranked as follows:
Regarding the longer-term performance, on a five-year average, Finland ranks 3rd in Europe in both venture and growth investments, but only 9th in buyout.
Invest Europe’s statistics also offer us a view of the relative strength of each country’s private equity market. While Finnish companies’ ability to attract capital was ranked 1st in Europe, local private equity investors’ supply of capital ranks only 9th. This is measured by local private equity funds’ investments relative to the country’s GDP.
Due to the gap between supply and demand, a significant portion of investments in Finnish companies comes from foreign investors. In 2023, of all the investments, 65% came from abroad, which is above the European average and notably higher than Sweden (44%), Denmark (41%) and UK (24%).
By choosing the right foreign investors, Finnish companies can benefit from their international networks and expertise.
In the past 30+ years, the Finnish private equity industry has made big advances and accumulated a lot of know-how. In addition, the constant inflow of new fund managers raising their first funds, 20 in the last 5 years, brings fresh approaches and healthy competition to the industry.
Nevertheless, without larger funds we won’t be able to compete in the bigger investments in Finland or abroad.
Creating some bigger Finnish private equity funds in all investment stages would enable Finnish investors to lead investment rounds in later-stage startups and grow the buyout-stage companies a step further. This would also give domestic companies better access to capital in the economic down cycles when international capital is harder to get. Longer and stronger domestic ownership would give the companies time to grow their roots deeper in the Finnish soil.