Tech

Too much risk in Silicon Valley: Venture capitalist

Bill Gurley: Don't see insane valuations
VIDEO2:5802:58
Bill Gurley: Don't see insane valuations

Venture capitalist Bill Gurley told CNBC on Wednesday there's still too much risk in Silicon Valley today.

"I don't see radically insane valuations. What I do see, out here, is an abundance of capital ... and as you cram almost unnecessary levels of capital into these private companies, it creates kind of perverse behavior," Gurley, a general partner at Benchmark, said on "Squawk Alley."


Bill Gurley
Getty Images

Over the past five years, there's been "an unprecedented amount of capital" poured into technology start-ups, he said.

There's no capital intensity for many of these tech start-ups, though, being as they don't need to build physical factories or stores, Gurley said. In turn, the only way to spend all that excess cash is to increase the burn rate, he said.

"The problem is, this growth at all costs mentality causes almost a substantiation of survival. It's much easier to execute unprofitably than profitably," Gurley said.

Read MoreAnother VC warns of lofty valuations, high risk

For example, one company could be profitable while another could lose $30 million annually, he noted.

"It's much easier to do that latter, so I think we end up with more companies at higher revenue rates where their business models may still be at question and that's what leads to the risk that I was talking about," he said.

If this "sloppy behavior" is not addressed by the tech start-ups themselves, Gurley worries it could eventually trigger a selloff.

Since Gurley first started sounding the alarm on this issue via Twitter last month, though, he said many company's board have started talking about this issue.