Thursday, January 25, 2018

The top 50 Disruptors


In the fifth annual Disruptor 50 list, CNBC features private companies in a range of industries — from biotech and machine learning to transportation and retail — whose innovations are changing the world. These forward-thinking starts-ups have identified unexploited niches in the marketplace that have the potential to become billion-dollar businesses, and they rushed to fill them. A startling 31 are unicorns that have already reached or passed the billion-dollar mark. In the process, they are creating new ecosystems for their products and services. Unseating corporate giants is no easy feat. But we ranked those venture capital–backed companies doing the best job. In aggregate, these 50 companies have raised nearly $44 billion in venture capital at an implied Disruptor 50 list market valuation of about $239 billion, according to PitchBook data. Already it's hard to think of the world without them. Read more about the consumer and business trends that stand out in the 2017 list ranking and the methodology used to select this year's Disruptor companies.

1 - Airbnb: It's a $31 billion trip
2 - Lyft: The car-ownership killer with a conscience
3 - WeWork: Reworking the office
4 - Grab: Uber-growth for an Asian ride-share rival
5 - Uptake Technologies: Capturing Warren Buffett's billionaire energy
6 - Houzz: The homiest e-catalog
7 - Ginkgo Bioworks: Growing products in the lab
8 - Palantir Technologies: Tracking the world's secrets
9 - Cylance: Making cyberthreats idle
10 - Udacity: Closing the skills gap
11 - CrowdStrike: Going into the breach
12 - 23andMe: Bring your genome home
13 - Progyny: Rocking the cradle
14 - SpaceX: Humanity's interstellar escape plan
15 - SurveyMonkey: Question everything
16 - Ezetap: India's answer to Apple Pay
17 - GreenSky: A credit to the mobile race
18 - Moderna Therapeutics: Going viral
19 - Uber: The car controversy with a valuation bigger than Tesla, GM or Ford
20 - SparkCognition: Deciphering the data overload
21 - IEX: The traders Michael Lewis made famous in a flash
22 - GitHub: The biggest coding party in the world
23 - Bloom Energy: Helping companies like Apple get off the grid
24 - Drawbridge: An ad strategy Facebook and Google can't ignore
25 - Jaunt: VR that both Disney and Paul McCartney have experience in
26 - Coursera: Go to a top school, without going
27 - MongoDB: The BIG idea in databases
28 - Qualtrics: Surveying the corporate landscape
29 - Domo: Complete cloud cover
30 - Blippar: You, augmented
31 - Pinterest: An image is worth $11 billion
32 - Illumio: A new segment in cybersecurity
33 - Phononic: Quietly cool
34 - Veniam: Constructing the global superhighway of data
35 - Spotify: Not even Apple Music has slowed it
36 - Dropbox: The file-sharing economy
37 - Trulioo: Tracks twice as many people as Facebook: 4 billion, exactly
38 - Synack: Who the IRS and DoD use against hackers
39 - DocuSign: Signed, sealed, electronically delivered
40 - Payoneer: Payments without borders
41 - Skillz: A sport to surpass the NFL, with less injury risk
42 - Blue Apron: What's for dinner
43 - Robinhood: There is no brokerage fee low enough
44 - Zocdoc: Real patient-centered health care
45 - SoFi: $18 billion in loans and counting
46 - Foursquare: A success story turned inside out
47 - Warby Parker: Still seeing things in new ways
48 - Persado: A motivational speaker that's not human
49 - Stripe: Visa is banking on this platform
50 - Quid: The ultimate trendspotter




One company missing from this list is Atractivo also known as Atractivo Business Services.  It claims to be a disruptor in the M&A industry; allowing business owners to strike deals with little-to-no M&A advisor or business broker involvement.  The service offered allows business owners to complete the sales process and put sales commissions into their pocket.  These sales commissions normally would be paid to M&A firms, business brokers, financial bankers, or other third-party intermediaries.

Growth Trends

Despite the multiple risks to business and household confidence in 2017, the world economy has held up rather well. Several key trends should support growth into 2018 and 2019 and have a positive impact on global deal values.


As we head into 2018, two key regions of the world economy are growing faster than we anticipated in our last edition, improving the outlook for world growth.

In China, fiscal stimulus is boosting infrastructure spending and supporting household incomes. At the same time, the new US administration’s failure to enact protectionist measures thus far is enabling manufacturing firms to regain confidence and resume investment. As such, Oxford Economics revised its forecast for Chinese GDP growth in 2018 from 5.9% earlier this year to 6.2%.

In the Eurozone, easing fears over Brexit and populism have buoyed business and household confidence, which has supported positive economic fundamentals. Oxford Economics raised its forecast for GDP growth in the Eurozone in 2018 from 1.6% to 1.9%.

In aggregate, Oxford Economics forecasts that global GDP growth will accelerate to a cyclical peak of 3% in 2018. Following that peak, however, the potential for cyclical catch-up growth in the Eurozone will have been exhausted, and growth in other major economies such as the US and Japan will also cool.


Stronger demand around the world is causing a rebound in China’s processing industry, comprised of companies that assemble components sourced from elsewhere. Activity in the processing sector contracted through most of 2015 and 2016 but recovered lost ground in 2017.
This recovery has stimulated activity in supply chains around Asia. Shipments from South Korea and Taiwan to China, for example, rose by more than 20% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2017. Key physical measures of world trade, such as container shipping and air freight, are now growing at their fastest rates since before the global crisis. Oxford Economics forecasts that global trade will grow by 4.8% in 2017, the fastest rate since 2011, and remain above 3.5% from 2018 through 2020.


Potential Risks A range of upside and downside risks could impact the global economy and lead to a rise or drop in deal values and volumes that differ from our transactions forecast. Those risks include: Policy missteps by the US administration: A sharp sell-off in the US corporate bond market could quickly spread through the world economy via exchange-traded funds. This would undermine firms’ access to finance and lower their appetite for dealmaking. The impact of asset price falls on corporate wealth could also hurt global deal appetite. Risk aversion over US corporate debt: A sharp sell-off in the US corporate bond market could quickly spread through the world economy via exchange-traded funds. This would undermine firms’ access to finance and lower their appetite for dealmaking. The impact of asset price falls on corporate wealth could also hurt global deal appetite. The potential for a disruptive Brexit: Failure to make progress on Brexit negotiations would renew sterling’s depreciation and cause a sharp fall in UK consumer spending. The impact on trade and business confidence would exacerbate existing vulnerabilities in the Eurozone banking sector. Cyclical acceleration in global trade: With trade rising faster than expected in 2017, businesses could expand capacity faster than currently forecast, boosting consumer spending via high demands for labor. This in turn could generate still-faster trade growth and boost dealmaking in key trading sectors such as manufactured goods and internationally-traded service sectors. China government lowers growth target: Gross debt has risen from 143% of GDP to 263% of GDP inside a decade, raising financial risk in China. To tackle these financial risks, the government could cut its GDP growth target, enabling slower credit growth. This would slow global trade and GDP growth, and cool the global dealmaking environment. As we head into 2018, two key regions of the world economy are growing faster than we anticipated in our last edition, improving the outlook for world growth. In China, fiscal stimulus is boosting infrastructure spending and supporting household incomes. At the same time, the new US administration’s failure to enact protectionist measures thus far is enabling manufacturing firms to regain confidence and resume investment. As such, Oxford Economics revised its forecast for Chinese GDP growth in 2018 from 5.9% earlier this year to 6.2%. In the Eurozone, easing fears over Brexit and populism have buoyed business and household confidence, which has supported positive economic fundamentals. Oxford Economics raised its forecast for GDP growth in the Eurozone in 2018 from 1.6% to 1.9%. In aggregate, Oxford Economics forecasts that global GDP growth will accelerate to a cyclical peak of 3% in 2018. Following that peak, however, the potential for cyclical catch-up growth in the Eurozone will have been exhausted, and growth in other major economies such as the US and Japan will also cool. 1 Stronger global demand GDP Growth Chart 2 Supply-chain Renaissance Stronger demand around the world is causing a rebound in China’s processing industry, comprised of companies that assemble components sourced from elsewhere. Activity in the processing sector contracted through most of 2015 and 2016 but recovered lost ground in 2017. This recovery has stimulated activity in supply chains around Asia. Shipments from South Korea and Taiwan to China, for example, rose by more than 20% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2017. Key physical measures of world trade, such as container shipping and air freight, are now growing at their fastest rates since before the global crisis. Oxford Economics forecasts that global trade will grow by 4.8% in 2017, the fastest rate since 2011, and remain above 3.5% from 2018 through 2020. 3 Gradual correction in stock market valuations Alongside the pickup in global growth and easing fears of protectionism, global equity markets have rallied through 2017. Equity markets should continue to enjoy the momentum of improving fundamentals for the next two years. Solid global trade and GDP growth, easing political risk, and cheap finance are key factors in maintaining future growth. However, in key markets such as the US, a gap seems to be appearing between stock market valuations and underlying corporate profits. We assume this gap will gradually narrow through 2019 and 2020, although a sharper correction is a potential risk to our forecast.


The top 50 Disruptors

In the fifth annual Disruptor 50 list, CNBC features private companies in a range of industries — from biotech and machine learning to t...