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MICHIGAN CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER MEETING

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North Coast Technology Investors, LP. Ann Arbor, MI. lindsay_at_northcoastvc.com. February 18, 2002 ... So When They Look at Clean Tech Venture Capital Investors See ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MICHIGAN CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER MEETING


1
MICHIGAN CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER MEETING
  • Now, Why Would I Invest in this Sector?
  • Lindsay Aspegren
  • North Coast Technology Investors, LP
  • Ann Arbor, MI
  • lindsay_at_northcoastvc.com
  • February 18, 2002

2
What is Venture Capital?
  • A classic financial intermediary.
  • A successful venture fund must earn a compounded
    cash on cash gross return in excess of 30 over
    its ten-year life (22.5 net).
  • This return on investment is driven by multiples
    (10x or greater) not the time value of money.
  • Core economics are based on (i) the pre-money
    valuation of the next round, an estimate of (ii)
    the number of financing rounds required until
    liquidity, and (iii) the amount of money needed
    in each round.

3
The Venture Capital Industry in the Late 1990s
  • Historically unique time of wealth creation.
  • In 1995, 9.9B was raised by venture capital
    funds and 5.1B invested in private companies. In
    2000, 104.6B was raised and 99.6B was invested.
  • Prior to 1995 it took a company 6.5 years to go
    public. In 2000, it took 1.7 years.
  • 70 of all venture capital invested in the last
    20 years was invested in 1999 and 2000.
  • The best product to sell is stock (never make a
    product, never make a profit the
    price-to-dreams ratio).

4
Then The Comet Hit the Earth
  • Historically unique time of wealth destruction.
  • The NASDAQ fell from 5027 on March 13, 2000 to
    1397 on September 21, 2001.
  • In 2000, there were 226 IPOs valued at 21.1B. In
    2001, there were 37 IPOs valued at 3.2B. With
    some exceptions the IPO window will be shut for a
    long time.
  • In 2001, only 40.6B of new capital was raised
    by the venture capital funds and 36.5B was
    invested in private companies - this was the
    third largest year ever.
  • And a lot of dinosaurs are feeling really sick
    today.

5
What Does All of This Mean for Venture Funding?
  • You dont have to compete against those web guys
    anymore!
  • There is 100B of uninvested venture capital
    raised by funds that has yet to be invested in
    private companies.
  • Multiple reasons to be optimistic
  • Economy is bottoming
  • Considerable evidence of sectoral tolerance for
    new targets
  • Less competition for classic economic inputs and
  • Gloomy investment climate leads to more
    reasonable valuations for early-stage
    investments.

6
What Does This Mean for Clean Tech?
  • Most Clean Tech companies are presumed to fit
    in the NVCAs Energy/Industrial category. This
    is not a good thing.
  • In 1995, 0.3B or 0.6 of venture capital
    investment went into Energy/Industrial category.
    In 2000, this increased to 1.4. This is falling
    back to 1.0 in 2001.
  • The number of Energy/Industrial category IPOs has
    declined from 16 in 1996 to 6 in 2000 and 1 in
    2001. The trend is toward less mature,
    speculative companies which is a double-edged
    sword.
  • Clean tech is a statistically marginal category
    of investment for the venture capital industry.

7
What are Venture Capital InvestorsLooking for. .
.
  • A growing market of reasonable size with an unmet
    need for a product or service.
  • Novel technologies where you can quickly get to
    proof of concept and create barriers to entry.
  • A strategy for partnering so that the risks
    associated with market acceptance and timing can
    be shared with someone else.
  • Clear economics and capital efficiency.
  • A kernel of a management team.

8
Still, There Remains Unlimited Potential for
Mistakes. . .
  • Investing in a technology that has not achieved
    proof of concept.
  • Investing in a technology that works, only to
    find out that no one cares.

9
Still, There Remains Unlimited Potential for
Mistakes. . .
  • Backing a company with weak management or board
    of directors.
  • Investing as part of a weak syndicate of
    investors.
  • Botching the estimated market size and/or
    botching the valuation.

10
Still, There Remains Unlimited Potential for
Mistakes. . .
  • Betting on the timing of a customer deal,
    corporate partnering deal, or IPO.
  • Investing in a company where success is dependent
    on changing the way the industry works or
    customers behave.

11
Still, There Remains Unlimited Potential for
Mistakes. . .
  • Investing in a company without doing careful due
    diligence.
  • Firing, then aiming or aiming, and not firing
    waiting too long, or not long enough, to change
    management.

12
Still, There Remains Unlimited Potential for
Mistakes. . .
  • Bad timing

13
So When They Look at Clean Tech Venture Capital
Investors See
  • Markets that are dependent on regulatory events
    and/or governmental actions to trigger growth.
  • A bias that novel technologies core value
    proposition usually adds cost in exchange for
    indirect benefits.
  • Poor industry structures and predatory partners
    who demand control for customers/supplier access.
  • Unclear economics and capital inefficiency.
  • A comparative absence of managerial talent.

14
But Investing in Good Ideas is What Venture
Capital Investors Do.
  • The long term demand drivers for clean tech seem
    to be clear despite the problems of market
    definition and industry structure.
  • A clear value proposition ought to exist for many
    customers and investors as a result.
  • Most of the other problems can be fixed if there
    is a clear commitment to run the enterprise as a
    business and not a science project and/or social
    good.
  • Good managerial leadership and common sense never
    go out of style.
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