{"id":10957,"date":"2024-10-28T15:35:39","date_gmt":"2024-10-28T08:35:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/?p=10957"},"modified":"2024-10-28T15:35:39","modified_gmt":"2024-10-28T08:35:39","slug":"global-vc-investment-falls-to-lowest-level-in-nearly-seven-years-as-number-of-us1-billion-deals-falters-according-to-kpmg-private-enterprises-venture-pulse-report","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/?p=10957","title":{"rendered":"Global VC investment falls to lowest level in nearly seven years as number of US$1 billion+ deals falters, according to KPMG Private Enterprise\u2019s Venture Pulse report"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>        Global VC investment drops from $95.5 billion to $70.1 billion quarter-over-quarter           AI accounts for six of ten largest VC deals globally in Q3&#8217;24, led by the only two $1 billion+ raises            Americas accounts for nearly 60% of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, with $41.4 billion in deal value           Japan and Germany buck geographical trend with Japan recording a VC investment twelve-quarter high.     <br \/> HONG KONG SAR &#8211;  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.media-outreach.com\/\">Media OutReach Newswire<\/a> &#8211; 28 October 2024 \u2013 Global VC investment fell from a five-quarter high of $95.5 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to a nearly seven-year low of $70.1 billion in Q3&#8217;24, amid ongoing geopolitical conflicts, the continued exit drought, anticipated seasonal lulls in investment in several key jurisdictions, and the uncertainty driven by the upcoming US presidential election. <\/p>\n<p> The decline came despite another solid quarter of VC investment in AI; the sector accounted for six of the ten largest VC deals globally, including a $1.5 billion raise by Anduril Industries and a $1 billion raise by Safe Superintelligence, according to the Q3&#8217;24 edition of  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/what-we-do\/industries\/private-enterprise.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">KPMG Private Enterprise<\/a>\u2019s  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/our-insights\/operations\/q3-24-venture-pulse-report-global.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">Venture Pulse<\/a> \u2014 a quarterly report that shines a spotlight on VC investment trends globally and in key jurisdictions around the world. <\/p>\n<p> While the Americas continued to attract the largest share of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, total investment in the region still fell from $58.6 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion in Q3&#8217;24. In Asia, VC investment fell from $18.5 billion to $15.6 billion quarter-over-quarter, while in Europe it dropped from $17.9 billion to $12.5 billion. <\/p>\n<p> Global exit value fell to a six-quarter low of $39.2 billion, driven primarily by a slowdown in US-based exit activity\u2014which fell from $25.2 billion to $11.2 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24, as the number of exits fell to a seventeen-quarter low of 244. Asia, which saw a five-year low of $11.2 billion in exit value in Q2&#8217;24, saw exit value jump to $18.2 billion in Q3&#8217;24. <\/p>\n<p> &#8220;AI investments drove the lion&#8217;s share of VC investment activity in Q3&#8217;24,&#8221; said  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/contacts\/m\/conor-moore.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">Conor Moore<\/a> Global Head, KPMG Private Enterprise, KPMG International. &#8220;But even within AI, a lot of deals were somewhat smaller than we&#8217;ve seen in recent quarters. This reflects somewhat of a trend in investors shifting their focus from core AI companies focused on LLMs (Large Language Models) and the like to companies with highly targeted industry solutions. Defense-tech was also a big winner in this quarter, in addition to biotech.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p> Q3&#8217;24\u2014Key Highlights  <\/p>\n<p> Global VC investment dropped from $95.5 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $70.1 billion in Q3&#8217;24; the number of VC deals dropped from 9,270 to 7,227 over the same period. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in the Americas dropped from $58.6 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion in Q3&#8217;24\u2014including from $55.5 billion to $37.5 billion in the US; in Asia, VC investment dropped from $18.5 billion to $15.6 billion, while in Europe it dropped from $17.9 billion to $12.5 billion. <\/p>\n<p> Global corporate VC investment fell from $54 billion to $35.2 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24; this included declines from $34.4 billion to $19.6 billion in the Americas\u2014including from $32.7 to $17.8 billion in the US\u2014from $10.7 to $9.4 billion in Asia, and from $8.5 billion to $5.9 billion in Europe. <\/p>\n<p> Global exit value dropped from $52.9 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $39.2 billion in Q3&#8217;24. <\/p>\n<p> Exit activity in Asia rose from $11.2 billion to $18.2 billion quarter-over-quarter, while it fell from $25.4 billion to $11.2 billion in the Americas, and from $16.3 billion to $9.8 billion in Europe. <\/p>\n<p> Global fundraising activity was well off the pace needed to match even 2023&#8217;s subdued total of $202.8 billion; at the end of Q3&#8217;24, global fundraising stood at $143.1 billion. <\/p>\n<p> AI sector sees six of the top ten deals globally in Q3&#8217;24, including largest deal in every key region <\/p>\n<p> While VC investment could be considered low in all regions of the world this quarter, AI continued to garner a lot of interest in Q3&#8217;24. Six of the ten largest deals during the quarter were AI focused, including a $1.5 billion raise from US-based Anduril Industries, a $1 billion raise by US-based Safe Superintelligence, a $688 million raise by China&#8217;s Baichuan AI, a $$640 million raise by US-based Groq, a $500 million raise by Canada-based Cohere, and a $483 million raise by Germany-based Helsing. <\/p>\n<p> While core AI firms continued to attract VC investments during Q3&#8217;24, including Safe Superintelligence, Baichuan AI, and China-based Moonshot AI ($300 million), VC investors also showed very strong interest in AI-driven industry solutions. In particular, AI-powered defense-tech companies raised large rounds in Q3&#8217;24, including Anduril Industries and Helsing. China also saw AutoAI, which enables automotive companies to embed AI into their vehicles, raise $107 million. <\/p>\n<p> Americas attracts $41.4 billion in VC investment in Q3&#8217;24; investment in Canada more than doubles  <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in the Americas fell from $58.6 billion across 4,104 deals in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion across 3,124 deals in Q3&#8217;24. The US accounted for a large majority of this total\u2014$37.5 billion across 2,794 deals. AI was by far the biggest ticket in the US\u2014accounting for the only two $1 billion+ deals in Q3&#8217;24 globally. Life sciences also attracted large deals, including a $370 million raise by autoimmune disease focused Candid Therapeutics, a $350 million raise by weight loss drug company Metsara, and a $325 million raise by programable cell cancer therapies company ArsenalBio. <\/p>\n<p> Canada had an excellent quarter of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, the total more than doubling from $1.2 billion to $2.7 billion quarter-over-quarter, led by a $900 million raise by legaltech Clio and a $500 million raise GenAI-focused Cohere. The Q3&#8217;24 total represented a ten-quarter high for Canada. In Brazil, VC investment dropped from $878 million to $473 million between Q2&#8217;24 and Q4&#8217;24, while in Mexico it dropped from $415 million to $358 million. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment falls to four-year low in Europe\u2014only Germany sees VC investment grow <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Europe plummeted from $17.9 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to a level not seen since Q2&#8217;20 ($12.5 billion) in Q3&#8217;24. Despite continuing to attract the largest share of VC funding in the region, the UK saw VC investment drop from $7.1 billion to $3.4 billion quarter-over-quarter. <\/p>\n<p> Germany was the only major jurisdiction in Europe to see VC investment increase\u2014from $2 billion to $2.4 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24. Germany also accounted three of Europe&#8217;s five largest deals during Q3&#8217;24, including a $483 million raise by AI-enabled defense-tech Helsing, a $278 million raise by satellite launch services company Isar Aerospace, and a $200 million raise by smart workout solution firm EGYM. Raises by France-based mobile games maker Voodoo ($385 million) and UK-based open payments firm Form3 ($$220 million) rounded out the top five. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Asia-Pacific falls; Japan bucks trend with a twelve-quarter high <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Asia dropped to a seven-year low of $15.6 million in Q3&#8217;24, driven by the continued slowdown in sizes and declining deal values; the largest raises in Q3&#8217;24 included a $788 million raise by Philippines-based Globe Fintech Innovation, a $688 million raise by Baichuan AI and a $415 million raise by semiconductor company ICLeague\u2014both in China, and a $362 million raise by Singapore-based semiconductor firm Silicon box. <\/p>\n<p> China continued to attract the largest share of VC investment in the region ($6.1 billion), although it was the lowest quarter of investment China has seen in over ten years. Despite a decline in Q3&#8217;24, VC investment in India remained solid at $3.6 billion, helped by a number of raises by consumer-focused businesses, including a $360 million raise by quick delivery company Zepto. VC investment in Japan bucked the downward trend, rising to a twelve-quarter high of $1.8 billion in Q3&#8217;24, driven by a ten-quarter high of deals volume (356), including a $214 million raise by Sakana AI. <\/p>\n<p> Waiting game heading into Q4&#8217;24, but all eyes on 2025 <\/p>\n<p> With the US election looming large on the global stage heading into Q4&#8217;24, VC investment will likely remain subdued for most of the quarter as investors take a wait-and-see approach until the results are decided. AI will likely remain a hot area of investment, in addition to defense-tech given ongoing global geopolitical tensions. <\/p>\n<p> There is a growing sense of optimism that exit activity is readying for a rebound, which would be very beneficial for the VC market globally heading into 2025. &#8220;We&#8217;ve had a long dry spell on the exit front globally, but market conditions are improving,&#8221; said Francois Chadwick, Partner, KPMG in the U.S.. &#8220;With interest rates dropping, M&amp;A will likely start ticking up because acquisitions are becoming more viable. And while IPO activity will likely remain slow through Q4&#8217;24 due to the US election, all eyes will be on the IPO market heading into 2025.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p>Hashtag: #KPMG<\/p>\n<p>The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.<\/p>\n\n<h4>About KPMG Private Enterprise <\/h4>\n<p>You know KPMG, you might not know KPMG Private Enterprise. We&#8217;re dedicated to working with businesses like yours. It&#8217;s all we do. Whether you&#8217;re an entrepreneur, a family business, or a fast-growing company, we understand what&#8217;s important to you. <\/p>\n<p> The KPMG Private Enterprise global network for Emerging Giants has extensive knowledge and experience working with the startup ecosystem. From seed to speed, we&#8217;re here throughout your journey. You gain access to KPMG&#8217;s global resources through a single point of contact\u2014a trusted adviser to your company. It&#8217;s a local touch with a global reach. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG is a global organization of independent professional services firms providing Audit, Tax and Advisory services. KPMG is the brand under which the member firms of KPMG International Limited (&#8220;KPMG International&#8221;) operate and provide professional services. &#8220;KPMG&#8221; is used to refer to individual member firms within the KPMG organization or to one or more member firms collectively. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG firms operate in 143 countries and territories with more than 273,000 partners and employees working in member firms around the world. Each KPMG firm is a legally distinct and separate entity and describes itself as such. Each KPMG member firm is responsible for its own obligations and liabilities. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG International Limited is a private English company limited by guarantee. KPMG International Limited and its related entities do not provide services to clients. <\/p>\n<p> For more detail about our structure, please visit kpmg.com\/governance. <\/p>\n<p><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><!-- wp:html --><\/p>\n<p>        Global VC investment drops from $95.5 billion to $70.1 billion quarter-over-quarter           AI accounts for six of ten largest VC deals globally in Q3&#8217;24, led by the only two $1 billion+ raises            Americas accounts for nearly 60% of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, with $41.4 billion in deal value           Japan and Germany buck geographical trend with Japan recording a VC investment twelve-quarter high.     <br \/> HONG KONG SAR &#8211;  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.media-outreach.com\/\">Media OutReach Newswire<\/a> &#8211; 28 October 2024 \u2013 Global VC investment fell from a five-quarter high of $95.5 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to a nearly seven-year low of $70.1 billion in Q3&#8217;24, amid ongoing geopolitical conflicts, the continued exit drought, anticipated seasonal lulls in investment in several key jurisdictions, and the uncertainty driven by the upcoming US presidential election. <\/p>\n<p> The decline came despite another solid quarter of VC investment in AI; the sector accounted for six of the ten largest VC deals globally, including a $1.5 billion raise by Anduril Industries and a $1 billion raise by Safe Superintelligence, according to the Q3&#8217;24 edition of  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/what-we-do\/industries\/private-enterprise.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">KPMG Private Enterprise<\/a>\u2019s  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/our-insights\/operations\/q3-24-venture-pulse-report-global.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">Venture Pulse<\/a> \u2014 a quarterly report that shines a spotlight on VC investment trends globally and in key jurisdictions around the world. <\/p>\n<p> While the Americas continued to attract the largest share of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, total investment in the region still fell from $58.6 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion in Q3&#8217;24. In Asia, VC investment fell from $18.5 billion to $15.6 billion quarter-over-quarter, while in Europe it dropped from $17.9 billion to $12.5 billion. <\/p>\n<p> Global exit value fell to a six-quarter low of $39.2 billion, driven primarily by a slowdown in US-based exit activity\u2014which fell from $25.2 billion to $11.2 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24, as the number of exits fell to a seventeen-quarter low of 244. Asia, which saw a five-year low of $11.2 billion in exit value in Q2&#8217;24, saw exit value jump to $18.2 billion in Q3&#8217;24. <\/p>\n<p> &#8220;AI investments drove the lion&#8217;s share of VC investment activity in Q3&#8217;24,&#8221; said  <a href=\"https:\/\/kpmg.com\/xx\/en\/contacts\/m\/conor-moore.html?cid=psrs_nwr_all_xx_2024_venturepulse-q3_fs\">Conor Moore<\/a> Global Head, KPMG Private Enterprise, KPMG International. &#8220;But even within AI, a lot of deals were somewhat smaller than we&#8217;ve seen in recent quarters. This reflects somewhat of a trend in investors shifting their focus from core AI companies focused on LLMs (Large Language Models) and the like to companies with highly targeted industry solutions. Defense-tech was also a big winner in this quarter, in addition to biotech.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p> Q3&#8217;24\u2014Key Highlights  <\/p>\n<p> Global VC investment dropped from $95.5 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $70.1 billion in Q3&#8217;24; the number of VC deals dropped from 9,270 to 7,227 over the same period. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in the Americas dropped from $58.6 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion in Q3&#8217;24\u2014including from $55.5 billion to $37.5 billion in the US; in Asia, VC investment dropped from $18.5 billion to $15.6 billion, while in Europe it dropped from $17.9 billion to $12.5 billion. <\/p>\n<p> Global corporate VC investment fell from $54 billion to $35.2 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24; this included declines from $34.4 billion to $19.6 billion in the Americas\u2014including from $32.7 to $17.8 billion in the US\u2014from $10.7 to $9.4 billion in Asia, and from $8.5 billion to $5.9 billion in Europe. <\/p>\n<p> Global exit value dropped from $52.9 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to $39.2 billion in Q3&#8217;24. <\/p>\n<p> Exit activity in Asia rose from $11.2 billion to $18.2 billion quarter-over-quarter, while it fell from $25.4 billion to $11.2 billion in the Americas, and from $16.3 billion to $9.8 billion in Europe. <\/p>\n<p> Global fundraising activity was well off the pace needed to match even 2023&#8217;s subdued total of $202.8 billion; at the end of Q3&#8217;24, global fundraising stood at $143.1 billion. <\/p>\n<p> AI sector sees six of the top ten deals globally in Q3&#8217;24, including largest deal in every key region <\/p>\n<p> While VC investment could be considered low in all regions of the world this quarter, AI continued to garner a lot of interest in Q3&#8217;24. Six of the ten largest deals during the quarter were AI focused, including a $1.5 billion raise from US-based Anduril Industries, a $1 billion raise by US-based Safe Superintelligence, a $688 million raise by China&#8217;s Baichuan AI, a $$640 million raise by US-based Groq, a $500 million raise by Canada-based Cohere, and a $483 million raise by Germany-based Helsing. <\/p>\n<p> While core AI firms continued to attract VC investments during Q3&#8217;24, including Safe Superintelligence, Baichuan AI, and China-based Moonshot AI ($300 million), VC investors also showed very strong interest in AI-driven industry solutions. In particular, AI-powered defense-tech companies raised large rounds in Q3&#8217;24, including Anduril Industries and Helsing. China also saw AutoAI, which enables automotive companies to embed AI into their vehicles, raise $107 million. <\/p>\n<p> Americas attracts $41.4 billion in VC investment in Q3&#8217;24; investment in Canada more than doubles  <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in the Americas fell from $58.6 billion across 4,104 deals in Q2&#8217;24 to $41.4 billion across 3,124 deals in Q3&#8217;24. The US accounted for a large majority of this total\u2014$37.5 billion across 2,794 deals. AI was by far the biggest ticket in the US\u2014accounting for the only two $1 billion+ deals in Q3&#8217;24 globally. Life sciences also attracted large deals, including a $370 million raise by autoimmune disease focused Candid Therapeutics, a $350 million raise by weight loss drug company Metsara, and a $325 million raise by programable cell cancer therapies company ArsenalBio. <\/p>\n<p> Canada had an excellent quarter of VC investment in Q3&#8217;24, the total more than doubling from $1.2 billion to $2.7 billion quarter-over-quarter, led by a $900 million raise by legaltech Clio and a $500 million raise GenAI-focused Cohere. The Q3&#8217;24 total represented a ten-quarter high for Canada. In Brazil, VC investment dropped from $878 million to $473 million between Q2&#8217;24 and Q4&#8217;24, while in Mexico it dropped from $415 million to $358 million. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment falls to four-year low in Europe\u2014only Germany sees VC investment grow <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Europe plummeted from $17.9 billion in Q2&#8217;24 to a level not seen since Q2&#8217;20 ($12.5 billion) in Q3&#8217;24. Despite continuing to attract the largest share of VC funding in the region, the UK saw VC investment drop from $7.1 billion to $3.4 billion quarter-over-quarter. <\/p>\n<p> Germany was the only major jurisdiction in Europe to see VC investment increase\u2014from $2 billion to $2.4 billion between Q2&#8217;24 and Q3&#8217;24. Germany also accounted three of Europe&#8217;s five largest deals during Q3&#8217;24, including a $483 million raise by AI-enabled defense-tech Helsing, a $278 million raise by satellite launch services company Isar Aerospace, and a $200 million raise by smart workout solution firm EGYM. Raises by France-based mobile games maker Voodoo ($385 million) and UK-based open payments firm Form3 ($$220 million) rounded out the top five. <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Asia-Pacific falls; Japan bucks trend with a twelve-quarter high <\/p>\n<p> VC investment in Asia dropped to a seven-year low of $15.6 million in Q3&#8217;24, driven by the continued slowdown in sizes and declining deal values; the largest raises in Q3&#8217;24 included a $788 million raise by Philippines-based Globe Fintech Innovation, a $688 million raise by Baichuan AI and a $415 million raise by semiconductor company ICLeague\u2014both in China, and a $362 million raise by Singapore-based semiconductor firm Silicon box. <\/p>\n<p> China continued to attract the largest share of VC investment in the region ($6.1 billion), although it was the lowest quarter of investment China has seen in over ten years. Despite a decline in Q3&#8217;24, VC investment in India remained solid at $3.6 billion, helped by a number of raises by consumer-focused businesses, including a $360 million raise by quick delivery company Zepto. VC investment in Japan bucked the downward trend, rising to a twelve-quarter high of $1.8 billion in Q3&#8217;24, driven by a ten-quarter high of deals volume (356), including a $214 million raise by Sakana AI. <\/p>\n<p> Waiting game heading into Q4&#8217;24, but all eyes on 2025 <\/p>\n<p> With the US election looming large on the global stage heading into Q4&#8217;24, VC investment will likely remain subdued for most of the quarter as investors take a wait-and-see approach until the results are decided. AI will likely remain a hot area of investment, in addition to defense-tech given ongoing global geopolitical tensions. <\/p>\n<p> There is a growing sense of optimism that exit activity is readying for a rebound, which would be very beneficial for the VC market globally heading into 2025. &#8220;We&#8217;ve had a long dry spell on the exit front globally, but market conditions are improving,&#8221; said Francois Chadwick, Partner, KPMG in the U.S.. &#8220;With interest rates dropping, M&amp;A will likely start ticking up because acquisitions are becoming more viable. And while IPO activity will likely remain slow through Q4&#8217;24 due to the US election, all eyes will be on the IPO market heading into 2025.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p>Hashtag: #KPMG<\/p>\n<p>The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.<\/p>\n<h4>About KPMG Private Enterprise <\/h4>\n<p>You know KPMG, you might not know KPMG Private Enterprise. We&#8217;re dedicated to working with businesses like yours. It&#8217;s all we do. Whether you&#8217;re an entrepreneur, a family business, or a fast-growing company, we understand what&#8217;s important to you. <\/p>\n<p> The KPMG Private Enterprise global network for Emerging Giants has extensive knowledge and experience working with the startup ecosystem. From seed to speed, we&#8217;re here throughout your journey. You gain access to KPMG&#8217;s global resources through a single point of contact\u2014a trusted adviser to your company. It&#8217;s a local touch with a global reach. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG is a global organization of independent professional services firms providing Audit, Tax and Advisory services. KPMG is the brand under which the member firms of KPMG International Limited (&#8220;KPMG International&#8221;) operate and provide professional services. &#8220;KPMG&#8221; is used to refer to individual member firms within the KPMG organization or to one or more member firms collectively. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG firms operate in 143 countries and territories with more than 273,000 partners and employees working in member firms around the world. Each KPMG firm is a legally distinct and separate entity and describes itself as such. Each KPMG member firm is responsible for its own obligations and liabilities. <\/p>\n<p> KPMG International Limited is a private English company limited by guarantee. KPMG International Limited and its related entities do not provide services to clients. <\/p>\n<p> For more detail about our structure, please visit kpmg.com\/governance. <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><!-- \/wp:html --><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"rop_custom_images_group":[],"rop_custom_messages_group":[],"rop_publish_now":"initial","rop_publish_now_accounts":[],"rop_publish_now_history":[],"rop_publish_now_status":"pending","footnotes":""},"categories":[2,4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-10957","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-media-outreach-newswire","category-media-outreach-newswire-en"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10957","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=10957"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10957\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=10957"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=10957"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thaipropertynews.com\/feeds\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=10957"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}