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Fewer exits but more capital for venture-backed start-ups in 2011

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Fewer U.S. startups saw mergers, acquisitions or IPOs last year, but the ones that did nabbed more capital than all the deals in 2010, according to a report from Dow Jones VentureSource.

There were 522 venture-backed exits last year -- a 4% slip from the year before. But together, they netted $53.2 billion – a 26% increase.

That’s because the prices paid for young companies and the amount raised in initial public offerings spiked in 2011.

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The median price purchasers shelled out in merger and buyout deals was up 77% to $71 million. And the 45 companies who went public last year – including major firms such as Groupon, Zynga, LinkedIn and Pandora -- raised $5.4 billion, more than the $3.3 billion raised by 46 IPOs in 2010.

To get to that point, companies headed for IPOs raised $85 million in venture capital – up 17% compared to the year before. But they reached the exit point faster – making it in 6.5 years compared to 8.1 years in 2010.

There are 60 venture-backed companies in the U.S. currently in IPO registration.

The acquisition world followed the same trend of fewer deals raking in more capital, as 460 companies were bought for $46.4 billion, a 13% plunge in activity but a 30% monetary boost compared to 2010.

“Companies are benefiting from lower start-up costs by taking capital farther toward a larger acquisition,” said Jessica Canning, Dow Jones VentureSource’s global research director, in a statement.

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