Venture Capital Final
Venture Capital Final
Venture Capital Final
(SIXTH SEMESTER)
T.Y.B.F.M
A PROJECT ON:
VENTURE CAPITAL
ACADEMIC YEAR:
2018-2019
SUBMITTED BY:
PROJECT GUIDE:
DATE OF SUBMISSION:
AND ECONOMICS
J.V.P.D SCHEME
_________________________ __________________________
__________________________ ____________________________
COLLEGE SEAL SIGNATURE OF BFM CO-ORDINATOR
_________________________
SIGNATURE OF EXTERNAL EXAMINAR
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Though it can be risky for the investors who put up the funds, the potential for
above-average returns is an attractive payoff. For new companies or ventures
that have a limited operating history (under two years), venture capital funding
is increasingly becoming a popular – even essential – source for raising
capital, especially if they lack access to capital markets, bank loans or other
debt instruments. The main downside is that the investors usually get equity in
the company, and thus a say in company decisions.
In a venture capital deal, large ownership chunks of a company are created and
sold to a few investors through independent limited partnerships that are
established by venture capital firms. Sometimes these partnerships consist of a
pool of several similar enterprises. One important difference between venture
capital and other private equity deals, however, is that venture capital tends to
focus on emerging companies seeking substantial funds for the first time ,
while private equity tends to fund larger, more established companies that are
seeking an equity infusion or a chance for company founders to transfer some
of their ownership stake.
Primary data will be sourced through personal interviews with experts in the
subject
Secondary data will be obtained from the internet, reference books and
relevant reports.
INDEX
Sr. Page
Topic
No No.
1 Introduction 1-3
2 Origin and Development of Venture Capital 4-6
3 Taxonomy on Venture Capital 7-14
4 Importance of Venture Capital financing 15-16
5 Fund Raising 17-21
6 Venture Capital Valuation Methods 22-26
7 Advantages vs Disadvantages 27-28
The venture capital sector is the most vibrant industry in the financial market
today. Venture capital is money provided by professionals who invest
alongside management in young, rapidly growing companies that have the
potential to develop into significant economic contributors. Venture capital is
an important source of equity for start – up companies.
Venture capital can be visualized as “your ideas and our money” concept of
developing business. Venture capitalists are people who pool financial
resources from high net worth individuals, corporate, pension funds, insurance
companies, etc. to invest in high – risk return ventures that are able to source
funds from regular channels like banks and capital markets. The venture
capital industry in India has really taken off in. Venture capitalists not only
provide monetary resources but also help the entrepreneur with guidance in
formalizing his ideas into a viable business venture.
Five critical success factors have been identified for growth of Venture capital
in India, namely:
The regulatory, tax and legal environment should play an enabling role as
internationally venture funds have involved in an atmosphere of structural
flexibility, fiscal neutrality and operational adaptability.
1
In a view of increasing global integration and mobility of capital it is
important that Indian venture capital funds as well as venture finance
enterprises are able to have global exposure and investment opportunities.
With technology and knowledge based ideas set to drive the global economy
in the coming millennium, and given the inherent strength by way of its human
capital , technical skills, cost competitive workforce, research and
entrepreneurship, India can unleash a revolution of wealth creation and rapid
economic growth in a suitable manner. However, for this to happen, there is a
need for risk finance and venture capital environment, which can leverage
innovation, promote technology and harness knowledge based ideas.
The 7th five-year plan as well as the fiscal policy of the Government of India
acknowledged the necessity for Venture Capital. Year 1973 also fostered
venture capital as a source of funding new entrepreneurs and technology which
was given by the report of the committee on development of small and
2
medium entrepreneurs. The government of India, relying on the World Bank’s
study of the inspection of the potential of development of Venture Capital in
the private sector took a 1 policy initiative and communicated guidelines for
Venture Capital Funds in 1988 but these were restrictive; allowing the setting
up of Venture Capital Funds by banks or financial institutions only.
3
Origin and Development of Venture Capital
Venture capital that originated in India very late is still in its infancy. It was
the Bhatt Committee (Committee on Development of Small and Medium
Entrepreneurs) in the year 1972, which recommended the creation of venture
capital. The committee urged the need for providing such capital to help new
entrepreneurs and technologists in settings up industries. A brief description of
some of the venture capital funds of India is as follows:
Seed capital scheme: This venture capital fund was launched by IDBI in 1976,
with the same objective in mind.
4
Government fund: IDBI, as nodal agency, administers the venture capital
fund created by the Central Government with effect from April1, 1986.
The government started imposing a Research and Development (R & D)
levy on all payments made for the purchase of technology from abroad,
including royalty payments, lump sum payments for foreign collaboration
and payment for designs and drawings under the R & D Cess Act, 1986.
The levy was used as a source of funding the venture capital fund.
5
elsewhere. Building of railways in parts of America and India, construction
of high-risk projects like Suez Canal etc are examples where pooled
resources were put at stake and turned into gold with enormous capital
gains.
The venture capital funding process typically involves four phases in the
company’s development:
Idea generation
Start-up
Ramp up
Exit
In the 1980s, several new independent funds like Equity Capital for industry
(ECI), Public Utility Pension Funds, National Enterprise Board, and several
semi-State venture capital bodies like Scottish and Welsh Development
Agencies were incorporated.
6
TAXONOMY ON VENTURE CAPITAL
1) Seed Financing:
The Seed Financing is the most complex and riskiest activity among the
venture investment.
7
Because this phase is very risky, there are three golden rules an investor needs
to know:
The investor has to screen one hundred projects, finance ten of them and
be lucky (and able) enough to find the one successful one.
The activity is risky that you must invest on much more that one project.
The investor needs to invest a huge amount of money. The “psychological
threshold” is one billion €.
By the time the investors find the winning project they will have lost much
of their beginning investment.
The investors usually invest in the markets they know the best.
Despite this, in some cases, the idea may be a good one without a market
willing to buy it.
Such is the case in which the investors look for venture philanthropy, set
up by non-profit institutions with the investors themselves.
8
Stage at Causation of
Risk
which major risk
of
investment by stage of
loss
made development
Start-up
53.0% 75.8%
stage
Second
33.7% 53.0%
stage
Bridge/pre-
20.9% 33.0%
IPO stage
1) Start-up Financing:
The Start-up Financing is the financing of a new company starting its own
initial operations.
The entrepreneurs and the founders’ need of cash derives from the necessity to
buy the necessary equipment to start (e.g. equipment, inventory, building, etc.)
the business. In this kind of financing the risk is still very high, leading to a
high level of protection for the investor.
The level of risk depends on the fact that the PEI is betting on a business plan.
Because the investor is neither a non-profit organization nor a High Net worth
Individual (HNWI), there are several ways in which this can occur.
9
1. Put Option:
This tool is used to sell back to the entrepreneur the shares the investor
bought. This tool is quite dangerous: it assumes that if the business plan
does not work, the founder will still have money to pay off the PE. For this
reason, the put option may be used together with a second too.
2. Collateral:
This is a pledge for the investor over some valuable assets of the newly
founded company and this is usually used together with the put option.
Another way to reduce the risk the business plan is not accurate and
reliable is to grant the inventor some stock options. In this way the
entrepreneur will also enjoy the profitability of the company.
The PEI needs to find the right combination between not losing all its
investment (such is the case when the PE owns 95% of the equity) and not
having any say in the management of the business (such is the case when
the PEI owns 2% of the equity) • For instance, for the investor the right
balance would be owning 48% of the company
Early growth Financing is the financing of the first phase of growth of a new
company that has started generating sales.
The entrepreneurs and the founders’ need of cash derive from the necessity to
buy inventory and to sustain the gap existing between cash flow and money
needed. In this phase, the cash flow is still negative, but not as much as in the
previous stages of life of the company.
10
The risk is still high for the PEI since it is investing in a very young company
and when they make the injection, they do not exactly know how the company
will turn out. In this phase, there is a very hands-on approach. If the PEI thinks
that the company is based on a good idea, but the business plan is not
adequate, it helps rewrite the business plan. For this reason the PEI usually
has a high amount of shares in the equity of the company.
On average this financing occurs up to the end of the first three year after the
start-up stage.
In this kind of investment, the PEI may also not have any protections, due to
the high stake in the equity of the company and to the adoption of hands on
approach.
3) Expansion Financing
The expansion financing takes place in the fastest phase of growth of a firm to
consolidate its position in the market.
The investment is only used to sustain the (reducing) gap existing between the
cash flow and money needed. In this phase, the level of risk is moderate (and
it mostly depends on the business) because the trend of development of the
business is well known. In this cluster the stake held by the PE is not usually
very high. The expansion financing deals are about the growth of a company.
2. External
11
a) Internal Growth
We say that a company grows via internal growth when it plans to grow “by
itself.” This means that investments in fixed assets and in working capital will
be made.
The role of the PEI: the investor needs to provide money to the venture backed
company in order to buy and/or sustain the procurement of working capital
and to purchase new assets. Because this kind of deal is not difficult for a PEI,
the offer is very wide and there is a very high number of investors providing
this financing.
b) External Growth
We say that a company grows via external growth when it plans to grow by
acquiring another company (i.e. carry on an M&A) in order to enhance the
level of sales and exploit the synergies coming from this operation. This path
is much more complicated than the internal growth and it may be undertaken
by an adult company in order to enter a new market.
12
2. The second way in which this M&A can be done is as follows:
The PEI builds a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV). The SPV is an “empty
box” built only for the purpose of a specific extraordinary operation. This
company does not have any assets nor liabilities and equity before the
operation takes place. • The PEI and the venture-backed company collect
money from the banking system and put the cash collected in the SPV. In
this way, they will have enough capital to buy another company.
a. When the venture-backed company has got a huge financial need and it
does not want to further increase the amount of debt.
b. The company wants to keep the SPV as a separate entity, this happens when
the company does not want the PEI to share the gain deriving from the M&A
process.
13
4) Replacement Financing
Replacement financing takes place in the mature age of a company and the
role of the PEI is that of replacing an existing shareholder.
These deals do not derive from the arise of need of money of a company.
14
Importance of Venture Capital Financing
Example: Hot mail dot com. It was a project invented by a young Indian
graduate from Bangalore, by name Sabir Bhatia. This project was developed
by him due to the financial assistance provided by the venture capital firms in
Silicon Valley, U.S.A. His project was later on purchased by Microsoft
Company, U.S.A. The Chairman of the company, Mr. Bill Gates offered 400
Million US Dollars in hot cash.
Brings out latent talent: While funding entrepreneurs, the venture capital
institutions give more thrust to potential talent of the borrower which helps
in the growth of the borrowing concern.
15
As Catalyst: A venture capital institution acts as more as a catalyst in
improving the financial and managerial talents of the borrowing concern.
The borrowing concerns will be keener to become self dependent and will
take necessary measures to repay the loan.
Helps sick companies: Many sick companies are able to turn around after
getting proper nursing from the venture capital institutions.
16
Fund Raising
First and foremost, identify the VC that might be investing within your
vertical. There are plenty of tools you can use to identify who might be a fit.
(You can use Crunch base, Matter mark, CB Insights, or Venture Deal.)
Once you have your list of targets, you will need to see who you have in
common and close to you who would be in a position to make an introduction.
The best introductions come from entrepreneurs that have given good returns
to the VC. VCs use these introductions as social proof and the stamp of
approval on the relationship. The better the introduction is, the more chances
you have of getting funded.
As a next step to receiving the introduction, and in the event there is a genuine
show of interest from the VC, you will have a call. Ideally you would want to
go straight to the partner to save time, or the goal would be to get an
introduction to the partner ASAP. If you are already in communication with
the partner after the first call, he or she will ask you to send a presentation
(also known as pitch deck) if the call goes well and there is interest.
In this regard, I recently covered the pitch deck template that was created by
Silicon Valley legend, Peter Thiel. I also provide a commentary on a pitch
deck from an Uber competitor that has risen over $400M.
After the partner has reviewed the presentation, she will get back to you (or
perhaps her assistant) in order to coordinate a time for you to go to the office
and to meet face to face. During this meeting, you’ll want to connect on a
personal level and to see if you have things in common. The partner will ask
questions. If you are able to address every concern well and the partner is
satisfied then you will be invited to present to the other partners.
The partner’s meeting is the last step to getting to the term sheet. All the
decision-making partners will be in the same room with you. Ideally the
partner you have been in communication with has spoken highly of you, unless
there have been issues (which you’ve hopefully covered by this time).
17
You’ll receive a term sheet if you were able to satisfy the concerns put forward
at the partners meeting. Remember that term sheet is just a promise to give you
financing. It does not mean that you will get the capital. It is a non-binding
agreement. If you want to dig deeper into term sheets I recommend reviewing
the Term Sheet Template piece that I recently published on Forbes.
Following the term sheet, the due diligence process begins. It will typically
take a VC one to three months to complete the due diligence. Unless there are
no major red flags you should be good to go, and receive the funds in the bank
once all the offering documents have been signed and executed.
Private equity and venture capital general partners are typically paid carried
interest on their funds’ gains in one of two ways: upon exiting each deal —
even if the fund hasn’t earned enough for investors to break even — or only
after invested capital and fees are returned to investors, generally once the
fund’s performance has met a hurdle rate. Researchers Niklas Heuther from
Indiana University, David Robinson of Duke University, Soenke Sievers from
the University of Paderborn, and Thomas Hartmann-Wendels of the University
of Cologne refer to the latter approach as “whole-fund carry provisions” —
and they find that, contrary to popular belief, delayed fees, which are generally
seen as an incentive for managers to beat a target return, may lead to worse
returns than if managers hadn’t been subject to a hurdle rate.
18
In a paper posted last month on research database SSRN, the group showed
that general partners who are paid carried interest on a deal-by-deal basis —
receiving their share of the return as they exit investments, instead of after they
meet a benchmark return for the fund — bested hurdle rate-using peers on a
gross and net-of-fee basis.
The authors noted that this difference in performance could be skewed by the
fact that the best-performing general partners have the most power in
negotiating fee contracts, and are therefore less likely to agree to “LP-friendly”
terms like hurdle rates. Still, the researchers concluded that fee terms that
“seems superficially to be desirable for limited partners are not obviously
better.”
“Venture investors get what they pay for, at least on average,” they wrote.
If you accept funds from an external investor, you must share information
about your company with them and delegate some decision-making. You can
draw up a shareholders' agreement to establish how joint decisions will be
made, and to balance the interests of different shareholders.
19
The shareholders' agreement will also cover the rights and duties of your
investment fund managers, e.g.:
Liability
A fund manager sitting on a company board has a duty of care to its
shareholders and creditors. They will generally avoid involvement in day-to-
day operations, as this will increase their liability should the company
collapse.
20
Exit strategies
Venture capital (VC) investors may decide to sell their investment and exit a
company. Alternatively, the company's management can buy the investor out
(known as a 'repurchase').
The exit value of a company must be mutually agreed between all parties, and
will depend on:
21
Venture Capital Valuation Methods
Management
Market
Science and technology
Financials / funding phase
For instance, if you were trying to place a value on an equity stake in a mid-
sized apparel retailer, you would look to the public sphere for companies of
similar size and stature who compete (preferably directly) with your target
firm. Once the "peer group" has been established, calculate the industry
averages. This would include firm-specific metrics such as operating
margins, free-cash-flow and sales per square foot (an important metric in retail
sales). Equity valuation metrics must also be collected, including price-to-
earnings, price-to-sales, price-to-book, price-to-free cash
flow and EV/EBIDTA among others. Multiples based on enterprise
value should give the best interpretation of firm value. By consolidating this
22
data you should be able to determine where the target firm falls in relation to
the publicly-traded peer group, which should allow you to make an educated
estimate of the value of an equity position in the private firm.
Additionally, if the target firm operates in an industry that has seen recent
acquisitions, corporate mergers or IPOs, you will be able to use the financial
information from these transactions to give an even more reliable estimate to
the firm's worth, as investment bankers and corporate finance teams have
determined the value of the target's closest competitors. While no two firms
are the same, similarly sized competitors with comparable market share will be
valued closely on most occasions
Method: The discounted cash flow method takes free cash flows generated in
the future by a specific project / company and discounts them to derive a
present value (i.e. today’s value).
The discounting value usually used is the weighted average cost of capital
(WACC) and is symbolized as the ‘r’ in the following formula:
Uses: DCF calculations are used to estimate the value of potential investments.
When DCF calculations produce values that are higher than the initial
investment, this usually indicates that the investment may be worthwhile and
should be considered.
23
Risk adjusted NPV
Method: The risk adjusted net present value (NPV) method employs the same
principle as the DCF method, except that each future cash flow is risk adjusted
to the probability of it actually occurring.
The probability of the cash flow occurring is also known as the ‘success rate’.
Method: The venture capital method reflects the process of investors, where
they are looking for an exit within 3 to 7 years. First an expected exit price for
the investment is estimated. From there, one calculates back to the post-money
valuation today taking into account the time and the risk the investors takes.
24
The return on investment can be estimated by determining what return an
investor could expect from that investment with the specific level of risk
attached.
25
The name decision tree analysis comes from the ‘tree’ like shape the analysis
creates where each ‘branch’ is a particular decision that can be undertaken.
26
Advantages vs Disadvantages
For start-ups and new businesses with significant potential for growth, venture
capital can provide a vital source of money to grow quickly. For example, let’s
say you have a new business idea with a ready-made and eager market to buy
it. What you don’t have is the money necessary to develop that idea into a
product you can sell to that market, at least not before competitors can. In this
situation, venture capital might allow you to quickly create and expand the
business, gaining market share and brand recognition before competitors can
beat you to the sale. Because venture capital is not a loan, it’s categorized as
equity in the company instead of debt carried by the company. Thus, the
company doesn’t have to repay the funds. Additionally, as the business grows,
its value tends to increase, so venture capital can end up making the original
owner's stake in the company even more valuable.
27
Advantages for Investors
The primary drawback of venture capital for investors is the significant risk
that accompanies that potential for significant reward. Potential is no guarantee
of success, and a huge payoff is not the favoured outcome, statistically
speaking. Even experienced venture capital investors can make a mistake, and
even the strongest business ideas can fall victim to unfortunate developments.
Poor business decisions, fundamental flaws in a business model, changes in
economic conditions and competition may impede growth even with ample
funding. If a company fails despite attracting venture capital, investors could
lose most if not all of their investment.
28
Trends in India
Digital currencies such as a Bit coin are beginning to find their way in the
Indian markets. They are promising to revolutionize the payments system over
the coming decade. The technology behind bit coins is the block chain
technology. This technology presents a great investment opportunity for VC
funds to park their money. This technology is all set to revolutionize the whole
29
digital payments industry. Given the demonetization initiative in India,
demand for digital payments solutions has begun increasing rapidly.
Consumers are increasingly game to use gadgets such as selfie sticks and
smart heating vents. The new generation consumers in India, which is tech-
savvy and social media friendly, connect instantly with these electronic
gadgets. Thus, this presents a great investment opportunity for VC funds,
especially because these products connect instantly with consumers on a larger
scale, forcing investors to take note. India has seen growing demand for
innovative hardware solutions in the past few years. Most Indian consumers
prefer consuming brands such as Beats, JawBone, FitBit, and the GoPro
camera, which are popular global electronic hardware products. The best part
is that these products are a good combination of low-cost manufacturing and
higher financial returns.
Real estate sector has been historically one of the most popular investment
avenues in India. Moreover, with the option of investing in real estate
funds through the SIP route, the demand for the sector is seeing more increase.
Government's Make in India and Housing for All initiatives coupled with the
thrust of the infrastructure sector promises to boost real estate demand. Thus,
the Indian real estate industry provides a great investment option for VC
funds.
30
Deep Tech start-ups—businesses driven by artificial intelligence (AI),
machine learning (ML) and the Internet of Things—saw record funding. The
biggest was robotics start-up Grey Orange’s $140 million led by Peter Thiel’s
Mithril Capital. Investors believe the rising interest in niche technology
segments is driven by a growing talent pool.
Start-ups go global
Oyo and Ola were among the big Indian start-ups that strode abroad in pursuit
of new growth avenues. Will this be the new norm for VCs and start-ups that
are chasing high expectations at mammoth valuations? “The valuation of these
firms is with the assumption that they will expand abroad," said Anirudh
Damani, managing partner, Artha Venture Fund, an early stage investor. Start-
ups have competition in their DNA because they are brought up being
compared with their global peers. So for these start-ups to go global is only
31
natural, he added. Investors expect this trend will continue, given start-ups are
raising large capital with the intention of going global.
“Indian start-ups are coming of age and some of them have not only perfected
their product-market fit within India but also see that their business models can
easily transition to a larger market outside India," said Niren Shah, managing
director at Norwest Venture Partners India. In many cases, when a start-up has
been successful in India, it has in effect cracked important elements such as
scale, cost, innovation and driving revenue in a low GDP per capita market.
“We are increasingly seeing Indian start-ups using these factors to their
advantage to go international," he added.
32
Regulatory Framework for Venture Capital in India
Venture Capital in India governs by the SEBI [8] Act, 1992 and SEBI
(Venture Capital Fund) Regulations, 1996. According to which, any company
or trust proposing to carry on activity of a Venture Capital Fund [9] shall get a
grant of certificate from SEBI [10]. However, registration of Foreign Venture
Capital Investors (FVCI) is not obligatory under the FVCI regulations [11].
Venture Capital funds and Foreign Venture Capital Investors are also covered
by Securities Contract (Regulation) Act, 1956, SEBI (Substantial Acquisition
of Shares & Takeover) Regulations, 1997, SEBI (Disclosure of Investor
Protection) Guidelines, 2000.
There are three layers of structured or institutional venture capital funds i.e.
venture capital funds set up by high net worth individual investors, venture
capital subsidiaries of corporations and private venture capital firms/ funds.
Venture funds in India can be divided on the basis of the type of promoters.
33
Also, promoted by Public Sector banks such as Canfina and SBI-Cap.
A Venture Capital Funds may generate investment from any investor (Indian,
Foreign or Non-resident Indian) by means of issue of units and no Venture
Capital Fund shall admit any investment from any investor which is less than
five Lakhs. Employees or principal officer or directors or trustee of the VCF or
the employees of the fund manager or Asset Management Company (AMC)
are only exempted. It is also mandatory that VCF shall have firm commitment
of at least five Crores from the Investors before the start of functions by the
VCF. Disclosure of investment strategy to SEBI before registration, no
investment in associated companies and duration of the life cycle of the fund is
compulsorily being done. It shall not invest more than twenty five percent of
the funds in one Venture Capital Undertaking. Also, minimum 66.67% of the
34
investible funds shall be utilized in unlisted equity shares or equity linked
instruments of Venture Capital Undertaking.
It is also mandatory that not more than 33.33% of the investible funds may be
invested by way of following as stated below: -
SPV (special purpose vehicles) which are created by VCF for the purpose
of making possible investment.
The foreign venture capital investor must disclose its investment strategy
and life cycle to SEBI, and it must achieve the investment conditions by
the end of its life cycle.
35
At least 66.67 per cent of the investible funds must be invested in unlisted
equity shares or equity linked instruments.
Not more than 33.33 per cent of the investible funds may be invested by
way of:
A foreign venture capital investor may invest its total corpus into one venture
capital fund [15].
Indian Venture Capital Funds are allowed to tax payback under Section
10(23FB) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Any income earned by an SEBI
registered Venture Capital Fund (established either in the form of a trust or a
company) set up to raise funds for investment in a Venture Capital
Undertaking is exempt from tax [16]. It will also be extensive to domestic
VCFs and VCCs which draw overseas venture capital investments provided
these VCFs/VCCs be conventional to the guidelines pertinent for domestic
VCFs/VCCs. On the other hand, if the Venture Capital Fund is prepared to
forego the tax exemptions available under Section 10(23F) of the Income Tax
Act, it would be within its rights to invest in any sector [17].
36
Venture Capital Helps Drive Start – up Economy
Companies usually begin with little more than a dream: a concept, an idea, or
an invention. But while hope, inspiration, and some personal savings can be
the promising seed for a start-up, it often takes much more to grow a concept
into a thriving company.
Long before a start-up company can borrow large amounts of money from a
bank or raise large amounts of money by going public, alternative sources of
funding are needed. And that’s where angel investors and venture
capital investments come into play. One hundred years ago, most venture
capital came from just a few wealthy families like the Rockefellers. Today,
investors who wish to participate in VC investments often do so through
managed venture capital funds. Professional angel investors typically
participate in angel groups or angel investor networks.
Venture capitalists have a large impact upon the world of commerce. Venture
capitalists invest more than $22 billion into approximately 2,700 United States
companies every year, according to the NVCA.
On average, the capital invested varies based upon the stage of growth of the
company, as follows:
37
Seed stage companies (7 percent of VC deals): Average VC funding of
$2,645,379.20
Venture capitalists can be found in just about every state in the nation. But the
top five states in terms of average VC funding are:
California
Massachusetts
New York
Washington
Texas
California is at the front of the pack, generating more than $14 billion in VC
funding each year – more than four times that of the next closest state in VC
funding, Massachusetts.
38
Medical Devices and Equipment – 9.2 percent
Though the flat economy has had an impact on the amount of venture capitalist
funding available in recent years, the industries of retailing and software have
experienced increases in VC funding in both 2011 and 2012.
While venture capital makes up a fraction of the $565 billion per year invested
into start-ups, it is a potent funding source. In fact, recent studies
(see: 8 National Venture Capital Association (NVCA), Venture Impact: The
Economic Importance of Venture Capital-Backed Companies to the U.S.
Economy, 5th ed., 2.) estimate more than a fifth of the United States gross
domestic product is provided by companies that were helped to maturity by
VC funding. That accounts for more than $3 trillion in revenue, and nearly 12
million jobs in the United States.
However, according to our own start-up funding data, only .05 percent of start-
ups raise start-up funding from VCs. Other sources of funding like personal
savings, credit cards, friends and family, angel investors, banks and crowd
funding are critical funding sources before most companies ever get to the
point of raising venture capital.
Traction is one of the most important differentiators for start-ups, for two
reasons. First, the people competing for capital likely won’t have any, and
secondly, no one can argue with traction.
39
Principles of Venture Capital
Because it's unlike other financial asset classes, venture capital portfolio
strategy is often misunderstood by newcomers.
Venture deal and venture capital fund returns mirror that of a power law
distribution. The characteristics of this fat tail curve mean that a tiny
number of returns are huge, but the overwhelming majority are
unspectacular (the tail)
40
Lesson 1: Home Runs Matter – Invest in each deal in isolation as if it's your
last.
65% of venture deals return less than the capital invested in them.
The majority of entire fund returns tend to come from single, incredibly
successful, "home run" investments. For the best performing funds, 90% of
their returns come from less than 20% of their investments.
Swinging for the fences means that you will make misses. But strike-out
(poor return) investments don't matter if a home run is hit. The best
performing funds actually have more loss-making deals than the average
funds.
1) Science
Play the probabilities and invest in MANY start-ups. With this philosophy,
you would need to invest in 50 businesses to stumble upon a 2% chance of
finding a unicorn.
41
This approach has been tried by accelerators, yet accelerator graduated
businesses have less successful follow-on outcomes (18%, compared to a
50% average), hinting that there is a quality <> quantity trade-off in
venture investing.
2) Art
Follow the philosophy of classic venture investing by making contrarian
bets into start-ups that display strong characteristics of team, addressable
market, scalability, unfair advantage, and timing coincidence.
A mistake that many a VC fund can make is to quickly invest all of its
capital and leave no dry powder for follow-on investments.
42
Andreessen Horowitz made a 312x return within two years from its
investment in Instagram. From an IRR perspective, this was a home run,
but because it only invested once, for $250,000, the $78 million of exit
proceeds were not significant within the context of its entire $1.5 billion
portfolio size.
43
Firms of Venture Capital in India
44
Industries: Consumer, Energy, Financial, Healthcare, Outsourcing,
Technology.
Nexus Venture Partners is a venture capital firm investing in early stage and
growth stage start-ups across sectors in India and US.
Start-ups
Funded: Snapdeal, Housing, Komli, ScaleArc, PubMatic, Delhivery.
45
Case Study - OLA CABS
Ola cabs have emerged as the fastest growing start-ups in the Indian market. It
is the result of brainstorming idea of 2 IITians Bhavish Aggarwal and Ankit
Bhati. They set up the firm in January 2011with its operation limited to
Mumbai only. Now it is the largest cab-booking service provider in India and
provides service in around 100 cities. They offer the service with almost
4,000,000 cabs across the country with a variety of car options like Mini,
Prime and Luxury. Different payment modes are provided to the customers for
their ride. The ultra-growth, enthusiasm and tremendous plan of expanding the
service to 100 cities till 2015 may be the reason which attracted Japan’s richest
man, Masayoshi Son, the chairman of telecom and media group Softbank
Corp, to invest in the company with an investment of $210 million. With its
super fine services and use of technology, the company’s revenue has reached
at $1billion. More than 400 employees are working under the roof of Ola cabs.
Vision
Hassle-free
Reliable and
Technology efficient car rental service to Indians
Investment
46
Ola is in mood to expand in more and more cities. That’s the reason for
investing much on technology, security, and new offerings.
Increasing Popularity
Ola cabs acquired TaxiForSure on 1st March, 2015 for about $200 million.
Ola Cabs is on the top of the social media share of voice among all the radio
taxi service providers in India. Ola Cabs has 46% share of voice which is
highest in all followed by Meru Cabs with 19% share. It has over 2lacs fans on
Facebook and over 18.2K followers on Twitter.
Success Story
47
other people may not face the same problem. He started implementing his
ideas and created the base and then after his classmate Ankit Bhati joined him
in the venture. They both implemented their ideas to make Ola better and
better. Soon after they received series A funding of $5million from Tiger
Global. After that they raised funds from many other investors. A series of
investment in Ola cabs has raised their total funding to $677millions.
48
Case Study – Swiggy
Swiggy Journey:
Swiggy began its Journey from Bengaluru with six delivery executives and 25
restaurants on its platform. In the time of 3 years, it has scaled up with over
6,000 delivery executives across India in more than 8 cities like Delhi-NCR,
Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata, and Pune.
Swiggy Funding:
Swiggy is backed by one of best investors available in the market. Swiggy has
raised a total of 75.5 million dollars in funding from various investors,
including Bessemer Venture Partners, Norwest Venture, Accel Partners, SAIF
Partners, Harmony Venture Partners, RB Investments and Apoletto.
49
Swiggy Competitors:
Indian food delivery market is valued at 15 billion dollars and set for an
exponential growth. Food delivery has become a very competitive market in
India. Swiggy is in direct competition with major on-demand food aggregators
like Zomato. Whereas there are other
small start-ups like Foodpanda and Faasos also in the competition.
50
Success story:
From the time of its inception, this online platform has raised large sums of
money which more than proves Swiggy’s worth as a food ordering
platform. Starting from discovery through visual menus, massive reduction in
delivery time and no minimum order, Swiggy has become the highest used
online platform. With over 12,000 restaurants in their roster, industry best
average delivery time of 37 minutes and reduced overhead costs, Swiggy has
positioned itself at the top of this field.
To make sure they are here for the long run, Swiggy has launched a host of
exciting features like Swiggy Pop, Swiggy Access and Swiggy Schedule. With
constant developments in their technology, Swiggy has made sure it has
secured the number one position in the country in relation to the online food
ordering food.
51
Growth and Decline of Venture Capital over the Years
In the early years of this century, VC firms and their investors were enthusiastic
about India’s potential. Fifty percent of the country’s 1.1 billion people were
younger than 30. From 2003 to 2007, GDP grew by 7.5 percent annually, 88
million middle-class households were formed (more than twice the number in
Brazil), urban dwellers grew by 35 million to 330 million, and 60 percent of the
population was in the labour force. Banks’ nonperforming-asset ratios fell from 9.5
percent to 2.6 percent. Further, the VC-to-GDP ratio stood at 1.8 percent,
reassuring investors that India had plenty of headroom when compared with
developed markets such as the United Kingdom (4.2 percent) and the United States
(4.4 percent).
VC investors poured about $93 billion into India between 2001 and 2013 (Exhibit
1). At first, returns were strong: 25 percent gross returns at exit for investments
made from 1998 to 2005, considerably better than the 18 percent average return of
public equity. But returns fell sharply in following vintages; funds that invested
between 2006 and 2009 yielded 7 percent returns at exit, below public markets’
average returns of 12 percent. In fact, India’s VC funds in recent years have come
up well short of benchmarks: with a 9 percent risk-free rate and a 9.5 percent
equity risk premium (accounting for currency risk, country risk, and volatility), the
climb for Indian VC investors is undisputedly steep. To be sure, returns are based
on a small number of exits, but that in itself is a problem. Only $16 billion of the
$51 billion of principal capital deployed between 2000 and 2008 has been exited
and returned to investors.
Where did VC firms go wrong? Many in the industry suggest that the management
approach favoured by North American buyout firms was ill suited to the Indian
52
opportunity and was made worse by the inexperience of VC firms operating on the
home turf of experienced promoters (a unique form of business owner and
investment syndicator). However, there are better explanations, in two categories,
which provide lessons for investors to explore.
Firms overestimated the market in several ways. Some misjudged the investable
universe of private companies. The pull of public markets set the stage for some
adverse selection of private companies and created unexpected competition from
intermediaries. Overly optimistic GDP forecasts and a convenient interpretation of
VC-to-GDP ratios also worked against some VC firms.
Indian general partners are fishing in a small pond (Exhibit 2). In 2013, India had
10,440 companies with between $25 million and $500 million in revenue,
excluding state-owned entities and publicly listed companies; China had 41,150
and Russia had 16,700. And general partners can’t step up in size and pursue larger
companies; there are about 270 private companies with revenues over $125 million
in India, compared with 1,295 in Brazil, 7,680 in China, and 3,430 in Russia. India
has about 30 private companies with more than $500 million in revenues.
53
India offers fewer private companies than other emerging markets.
Indian general partners are in constant competition with stubbornly high capital-
market valuations. India has around 2,600 publicly listed companies with less than
$125 million in revenue, compared with 1,000 in China. As a result, many private
companies went public before VC managers could access them.1This had two
effects. First, it created pricing pressure on private buyers; indeed, India is one of
the few markets where private valuations meet and often exceed public-market
comparables. Second, some argue it created an adverse selection of private
companies, as companies that could access public markets did.
With fewer investable private companies, competition from capital markets, and
growing levels of “dry powder” among VC firms, the environment became fertile
for sell-side intermediaries, facilitating greater competition. Intermediaries push
prices up via auctions, and, of course, public comps underpin the market. As a
result, Indian general partners saw a highly intermediated, fully priced market with
few proprietary deals.
Rewards for optimism persisted longer than they should have. In every year but
one between 2002 and 2010, India’s GDP exceeded all major analysts’ predictions.
However, from 2011 on, that trend reversed sharply as India’s GDP came in either
below or at the lower end of analysts’ expectations. With so many models pegged
to GDP growth estimates, volatility played havoc with returns.
54
India’s general partners also had more capital on hand than could be reasonably
invested. Many investors were bewitched by industry observers’ claims that India’s
VC-to-GDP ratio was low relative to developed markets. However, a closer look
reveals those numbers weren’t so low. If cumulative VC investments from 2002 to
2005 relative to 2005 GDP are considered, India stood at 0.72 percent, similar to
China (0.85 percent) and below Indonesia (1.08 percent) and Korea (1.15 percent).
But as capital flowed in, India quickly hit and passed these benchmarks. The
figures for 2006–09 stood at 3.5 percent for India, higher than China (1.2 percent),
Korea (2.4 percent), and Indonesia (0.8 percent). True, between 2006 and 2009
private investors sunk nearly $60 billion into China, more than the $47 billion they
invested in India. But then again, the Chinese opportunity is much larger—bears in
mind the more than 40,000 companies that private investors might access in China,
relative to India’s 10,000, as shown in Exhibit 2. By the end of 2006, investors in
India sat on more than four years of dry powder.
With excess capital on hand, general partners increased transaction sizes and
invested in a range of sectors, many of them capital intensive, relatively illiquid,
and requiring longer times to exit. As a result, returns have been hurt, exits have
been scarce, and secondary sales are becoming much more frequent.
Between 2005 and 2008, firms deployed capital in several industries (Exhibit 3). In
the next wave of investment, between 2009 and 2013, the investment mix shifted
considerably, and not for the better. For one thing, more investments were directed
to sectors that have longer gestation times and are more capital-expenditure
intensive, such as engineering and construction, hospitals, power generation, and
real estate—in other words, infrastructure plays. In India, such investments are
often Greenfield and take longer to bear fruit. By 2013, all of the 25 largest firms
had at least one such investment in their portfolios, representing 43 percent of the
$77 billion invested between 2007 and 2013. In several cases, as bank lending got
tighter, inflation rose, and policies wavered, the returns in these sectors dropped,
just as firms were committing more capital to them.
55
Second, many infrastructure investments were made by generalist firms whose
capabilities to manage risk and projects with longer exit horizons varied
significantly. By contrast, consumer goods accounted for a mere 6 percent of
investments in 2005–08 and 5 percent in 2009–13. The expansion of investors’
appetite for larger deals came at the same time that several capital-hungry sectors
sought capital. But this increased risk, as these sectors were disproportionately
affected by escalating input costs and policy-driven delays.
The average investment holding period for exited deals rose from 3.5 years in 2004
to 5.2 years in 2013. Those entering these relatively illiquid long-gestation
businesses found it even harder to exit: of the $51 billion in investments made
between 2000 and 2008, only 14 percent (by value) of those in real estate exited,
along with 29 percent in logistics plays, 21 percent in engineering and construction
companies, and 9 percent in energy and utilities (Exhibit 4). Shareholders and
promoters found themselves in a tough position as input costs soared, working-
capital needs increased, and the IPO market lost its appetite for midmarket listings.
In aggregate, only $16 billion (31 percent) of the $51 billion invested has exited, at
a value of $27 billion (Exhibit 5). While several general partners have successfully
renegotiated extensions with limited partners, these forces can be expected to have
a material impact on returns.
Most sectors saw few exits, long holding periods, and low gross returns.
Of $51 billion invested from 2000 to 2008, $16 billion exited at 1.7 xs, or a
value of $27 billion.
56
Like many emerging markets, India is prone to momentum investing, with few
contrarians to be found. More than 70 percent of private investments in the past ten
years were made when the index traded above its ten-year median price-to-
earnings multiple of 17.4 (Exhibit 6). By contrast, firms in China deployed less
than 50 percent of their capital at times of high valuation. In India’s volatile
lending environment, promoters learned to raise capital when capital is plentiful.
Discussions with general partners reveal a perception of unrealistic price
expectations and overpriced investments in others’ portfolios. In a market that
should prize liquidity, capturing liquidity premiums remains difficult.
57
What might go right?
For all these flaws, VC has grown to become a critical source of capital in the
Indian economy. VC firms are responsible for 36 percent of the equity raised by
companies in the past ten years and contribute even more when times are tough—
47 percent in 2008 and 46 percent, on average, from 2011 to 2013. Further, our
ongoing research suggests that VC-backed companies in India increased revenue
and earnings faster than public companies across nearly all sectors and vintages,
and these companies are, on balance, better governed, more compliant with respect
to regulatory and fiduciary obligations, more likely to pursue M&A, and better at
seizing export opportunities.
VC investors are clearly doing something right, and they can build on this. Once
investors set their sights appropriately and govern behavioural excesses, they can
begin to invest in an India that is paradoxically underserved. There are five
supports that might emerge for a new wave of growth and returns: an increasing
bias toward control deals, a recognition of the complex needs of family-owned
businesses, new supply to meet a large and unaddressed need for mezzanine
financing and capital restructuring, greater limited-partner scrutiny of general-
partner strategies with track records, and support from regulators to boost the
confidence of foreign and domestic investors.
As they look for new targets, VC firms can seek more opportunities to exercise
control. In 2006–07, 13 percent of Indian VC investments by value were control
investments. By 2013, this had increased to 29 percent—a favourable trend.
Control investments allow firms to support an aging generation of entrepreneurs,
ensure better capital discipline in portfolio companies across volatile cycles, and
facilitate easier exits so that firms can renew maturing portfolios. A recent
McKinsey survey of Indian general partners revealed capital discipline was the
second most important focus after management capabilities.
Many of India’s aging owners have succession problems, underscoring the need to
address the issues of family-owned businesses. An estimated 70 percent by volume
of VC investment from 2007 to 2013 (46 percent by value) went into family-
owned businesses. Firms that build a deeper appreciation of the complex needs of
58
these businesses, including the dynamics that affect succession, talent attraction,
family trusts, liquidity, and governance, can bring significant value to their
investments and align the interests of promoters more easily. Investors confronted
with issues in their family-owned-business investments need to act on early-
warning signs and work through them in an orderly fashion to minimize impact on
companies’ health and performance. In the diligence phase, placing an equal
emphasis on the business and on the promoter and management can help firms
anticipate governance issues. In a recent McKinsey survey of portfolio-company
promoters, general partners and portfolio companies identified the inability to
recognize and navigate family issues as a weakness of general partners.
With nonperforming corporate loans rising fast at India’s banks and more
corporate-debt-restructuring cases landing on the books of state banks (which do
not always have strong workout capabilities), there is a strong case for more
distressed-debt funds. Many companies have problems in their capital structure,
and VC players have the skills for efficient restructuring.
However, both mezzanine and distressed-debt funds need regulatory support. For
this to take off, regulators would have to develop an appreciation of mezzanine
debt, as they do equity risk capital. In doing so, they would need to expedite court
receivership and delisting processes.
59
delisting process, encouraging distressed debt and mezzanine financing,
simplifying fund-registration requirements, and recognizing the difference between
traditional promoters and active investors. While these reforms have been on the
table for a few years, many hold out hope that the new government will see some
of them through.
Limited partners also have a role to play in seeing PE expand; they can do better at
general-partner selection. Experience matters and is on the rise. Of the 113 funds
that invested between 2000 and 2013, 33 are now inactive. The vast majority of
these were first timers. The sector is slowly maturing; the number of funds
investing from a third (or successive) fund increased from 5 in 2003 to 22 in 2013.
As limited partners increase selectivity, further consolidation and increased
discipline are anticipated.
60
Conclusion
Venture Capital Industry in India has a lost a bit of its shine in the past few
years. VC funds are struggling to exit portfolio companies or secure
investments at good valuations.VC funds are finding it difficult to raise funds
from foreign investors given the current global economic scenario and the
lackluster performance of the Indian economy. Perhaps the Venture Capital
industry in India which is currently overcrowded with several hundreds of
funds needs consolidation However, there is no doubt about the fact that for
India to grow at 9% private equity investments are indispensable especially in
sectors such as infrastructure, education , healthcare, IT/ITeS. Private equity
has a big role to play in helping companies grow, increasing employment,
raise productivity, improve corporate governance in small and midsized firms;
foster growth and encourage innovation and entrepreneurship. However, for
VC to realize its full potential, important regulatory hurdles like uncertainties
in India’s tax regime and limited investment opportunities for foreign investors
in several regulated sectors such as multi brand retail need to be addressed.
Going forward the Indian private equity investor still has faith in the long term
growth potential of the Indian economy and is cautiously optimistic.
61
Bibliography
Websites:
www.investopedia.com
www.scribd.com
www.citeman.com
www.charteredclub.com
accountlearning.com
www.forbes.com
www.nibusinessinfo.co.uk
www.venturevaluation.com
www.thebusinessprofessor.com
www.altsmart.in
www.livemint.com
www.legalservicesindia.com
www.toptal.com
62