Venture Capital Deal Value in Supply Chain Tech Surges as AI Spurs Investor Confidence, Report Claims

Venture capital deal value in supply chain technology has now climbed by 26.1% as AI spurs investor confidence, according to an update from PitchBook. After several fairly sluggish quarters, venture capital is now said to be flowing back into high-potential supply chain technology. PitchBook further noted that during Q3 2025, deal value increased considerably quarter over quarter to hit $3 billion—up almost 28% year over year.

This, as investors seemingly grew more confident amid “easing” trade concerns. PitchBook also mentioned in its research report that more late-stage and venture-growth rounds have led the charge, with companies such as Nuro and BETA Technologies “closing major deals and Kodiak Robotics completing a $207.9 million reverse merger.”

According to the research report from PitchBook, AI or artificial intelligence continues to be the defining theme, “driving both investor interest and operational gains.”

PitchBook also stated that traditional logistics providers such as C.H. Robinson and J.B. Hunt are reportedly “reaping efficiency boosts from AI agents, while startups such as Auger and Augment are building next-generation, AI-native supply chain platforms.”

As funding momentum builds, established founders and fresh AI use cases are said to be “positioning supply chain tech for an even stronger close to 2025.”

As covered this past month, European venture markets this year continue to tell two very different stories and contrasting narratives, according to a report from PitchBook. On one hand, artificial intelligence appears to have cemented itself as the dominant force, making up almost 40% of deal value YTD and delivering some of the year’s most sizable funding rounds, including those by Mistral AI and Nscale.

PitchBook also noted in its latest update that on the other hand, exits remain somewhat uneven, highlighted by BNPL Fintech firm Klarna’s recent initial public offering (IPO), which has significantly buoyed overall exit figures but largely left underlying activity lagging.

Meanwhile, the research report pointed out that emerging managers are reshaping the fundraising ecosystem, with relatively smaller, first-time funds steadily gaining market share, and venture debt activity has slowed down considerably after a very solid 2024.



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