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Have You Heard About The Herd Of Failed And Struggling AI-Focused Unicorns?

Illustration of toppled cupcake with unicorn topper.

These days, we hear a lot about companies seeing soaring valuations as a result of their artificial intelligence prowess. It鈥檚 easy to get the impression that an AI-focused business model is the most direct route to investors鈥 hearts.

In reality, however, investors aren鈥檛 so easily swayed. Scores of venture-backed companies touting artificial intelligence technologies have shuttered or seen valuations plummet in the past few quarters. Such cases are particularly visible among those that went public during the 2021 SPAC boom.

One of the most prominent recent casualties is , a U.K.-based digital health startup with a self-described mission 鈥渢o make high-quality healthcare accessible and affordable for everyone on Earth.鈥 The company, once valued at over $2 billion, .

It turns out, an artificial intelligence focus didn鈥檛 prevent Babylon鈥檚 fall. The company mentioned 鈥淎I鈥 no fewer than 25 times in its 2021 for a public offering. Prior to that, it raised more than $600 million in venture funding around its pitch to leverage artificial intelligence to provide digital health diagnoses.

Members of the herd

The list of fallen unicorns and near-unicorns that touted their artificial intelligence creds is by no means limited to Babylon. Using SA国际传媒 data, we put together a few examples from the wreckage of the SPAC boom.

: The New York-based clickbait pioneer got plenty of attention earlier this year for its move to produce and publish more . Wall Street reacted with a shrug. Today, BuzzFeed shares trade for around 40 cents each 鈥 close to their all-time low.

: The insurance upstart, known for pay-per-mile auto policies paired with tracking devices, raised hundreds of millions in venture funding before going public in early 2021. Yet even though Metromile has a long history of its AI chops, the San Francisco-based company floundered on the public market. It sold to fellow insurtech last year at a valuation lower than its cash balance.

: Kentucky-based AppHarvest took a heavily tech-driven approach to the business of growing tomatoes and other crops indoors. Investors were initially on board. It raised more than $100 million in venture funding, plus hundreds of millions more through a SPAC merger. The company used some of that capital to , an artificial intelligence farming startup, but buzz around the technology didn鈥檛 serve to boost shares. AppHarvest in July.

: Embark Technology, also known as Embark Trucks, snagged a sky-high valuation at the peak of the SPAC boom. The pre-revenue company boasted an initial market cap of more than $5 billion, amid broad enthusiasm for its application of machine-learning technology to bring self-driving capability to long-haul trucking. It worked out poorly, with shares of the San Francisco-based company sliding over 98% in subsequent months. This culminated with a decision this year to wind down operations, followed by an agreement to at a fraction their former value.

: Bedford, Massachusetts-based Berkshire Grey pitches itself as a player at the intersection of AI and robotics, with technologies geared at automating supply chain and e-commerce fulfillment operations. The company went public via SPAC in 2021 at an initial $2.7 billion valuation, but quickly saw share values plummet. Early this year, key backer agreed to take the company private, paying $375 million for the 71% of the company it didn鈥檛 already own.

That鈥檚 just a partial list of AI flops

The companies listed above aren鈥檛 the only brands vested in AI that failed to set the markets on fire. As we observed a few months ago, the most highly valued artificial intelligence-oriented companies to go public between 2020 and 2022 are trading well below their initial offering prices.

In private markets too, some formerly buzzy AI startups have also and seen valuations fall. They will not be the last.

Sporadic startup implosions, however, don鈥檛 say much about whether the recent spike in AI-related investment will generate venture-worthy returns. In every technology cycle, some ambitious upstarts thrive, others fall and still others manage to keep plodding along. This time, it appears, is no different.

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