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Private equity and venture capital

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Private equity and venture capital. The private equity market ... Venture capital market, which includes funding for start-up firms ... How do VCs value a new venture? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Private equity and venture capital


1
Private equity and venture capital
2
The private equity market
  • The private equity market (PE) is a source of
    funding for start-up firms, private middle-market
    firms, firms in financial distress, and public
    firms seeking buyout financing
  • The size of the private equity market rose from
    0.8bn in 1980 to 148.4bn in 2000, while it was
    43.8bn in 2002
  • The private equity market is divided into two
    parts
  • Venture capital market, which includes funding
    for start-up firms
  • Non-venture private equity market, which includes
    funding for established private firms (leveraged
    and management buyouts)

3
  • Well-known firms that have received PE financing
  • Apple
  • Cisco
  • Microsoft
  • Netscape
  • Sun Microsystems
  • Staples
  • Starbucks
  • Google
  • Amazon

4
Organization of the private equity market
  • The private equity market is composed of the
    following groups
  • The firms (issuers) that seek financing from
    private investors
  • The private equity funds organized in the form of
    limited partnerships
  • The outside investors who invest in the private
    equity market
  • The agents and advisers whose role is to generate
    information

5
Who are the issuers?
  • Private equity financing is very expensive given
    the high returns expected by private equity
    investors
  • The firms that go to the private equity market do
    so because they have no alternative sources of
    financing
  • These firms may
  • Be too risky to issue debt
  • Require extensive due diligence due to the risks
    involved
  • Need investor guidance and expertise
  • Private equity investors can help resolve these
    issues

6
Taxonomy of issuers
  • Firms seeking venture capital
  • Early-stage ventures
  • Later-stage ventures
  • Middle-market private firms
  • Grown private firms that need financing to expand
    or change their capital structure and do not wish
    to go public
  • Public and private firms in financial distress
  • Public buyouts (LBOs)

7
Percentage Invested by Stage in U.S. (1996-2000)

8
Organization of PE funds
  • The growth in the PE market during the past three
    decades is to a large degree attributed to the
    emergence of the limited partnership form of
    organization
  • Limited partnerships are financial intermediaries
    that raise and invest funds from investors
  • Until the late 1970s, most of the private equity
    investments were undertaken by wealthy
    individuals, large corporations, and banks
    investing directly into issuing firms

9
  • Private equity funds are mainly structured in the
    form of limited partnerships
  • Limited partnerships are composed of
  • General managing partners who are professional
    managers running the fund
  • Limited partners who are institutional investors
    and other individuals who contribute to the
    funds capital

10
  • Typically, a group of experienced investors forms
    a a managing partnership or LLC to act as general
    partner
  • The managing partners typically form a second
    entity called the PE fund partnership or a LLC to
    manage the fund
  • Outside investors, as well as the funds
    managers, promise to contribute to the capital
    raised by the fund
  • The fund managers identify and evaluate potential
    investments, monitor these investments, and
    recommend exit strategies

11
Characteristics of limited partnerships
  • General partners (GP) run the business and have
    unlimited liability
  • Limited partners do not actively participate in
    the business
  • Liability (but not tax liability) is generally
    limited to contribution to the partnership
  • Limited transferability of partnership interest

12
Typical Life of a Limited Partnership
Raise Capital
Identify and structure investments
Manage and liquidate investments
5
10
0
Year
13
Taxonomy of PE funds
  • Venture capital funds
  • Leverage buyout funds
  • Use significant amounts of debt borrowed by using
    the acquired firms assets as collateral
  • Purchase firms with stable cash flows, large
    market share, undervalued shares, and in stable
    industries
  • Mezzanine funds
  • Either private equity financing before an IPO or
    private equity investments that use subordinated
    debt often with attached warrants
  • Hedge funds
  • Funds of funds

14
Leading Technology Venture Firmsas of December
2002
  • Capital
    Under Management
  • Rank Company
    ( in billions)
  • 1 New Enterprise Associates 4.9
  • 2 Oak Investment Partners 4.2
  • 3 Sprout Group 3.4
  • 4 Accel Partners 3.2
  • 5 Spectrum Equity Investors 3.0
  • 6 St. Paul Venture Capital 3.0
  • 7 Menlo Ventures 2.7
  • 8 Austin Ventures 2.6
  • 9 Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield
    Byers 2.6
  • 10 VantagePoint Venture Partners 2.6

Source Private Equity Analyst
15
Largest 15 Buyout Funds ClosedOctober 2001 to
September 2002
  • Committed
    Capital
  • Rank Company
    ( in billions)
  • 1 Blackstone Capital Partners IV,
    L.P. 6.45
  • 2 DLJ Merchant Banking Partners III,
    L.P. 5.40
  • 3 Warburg Pincus Private Equity VIII,
    L.P. 5.30
  • 4 Apollo Investment Fund V, L.P. 3.75
  • 5 CSFB Global Opportunities Fund,
    L.P. 2.20
  • 6 Global Private Equity IV, L.P. 1.90
  • 7 J.W. Childs Equity Partners III,
    L.P. 1.75
  • 8 Berkshire Fund VI, L.P. 1.70
  • 9 Hicks, Muse, Tate Furst Equity Fund
    V, L.P. 1.60
  • 10 The Resolute Fund, L.P. 1.50
  • 11 Heartland Industrial Partners,
    L.P. 1.40
  • 12 Angelo Gordon Capital Recovery
    Partners III, L.P. 1.00
  • 13 OCM Emerging Markets Fund III,
    L.P. 0.96
  • 14 Fremont Partners III, L.P. 0.92
  • 15 CIVC Partners Fund III, L.P. 0.80

Sources Alternative Investor/Private Equity
Analyst/VentureOne
16
Who are the investors?
  • Thirty years ago, wealthy individuals accounted
    for the largest share of PE investments
  • The prudent man rule of 1979 allowed pension
    funds to invest in riskier assets and gave a
    boost to the PE market
  • Institutional investors (private and public
    pension funds, financial and insurance firms) put
    today almost all of the contributed capital in PE
    funds

17
Investors In Private Equity (continued)LP
Capital Commitments to VC Funds
Source Venture Economics/NVCA
18
Investors In Private Equity (continued) LP
Capital Commitments to Buyouts/Other Non-Venture
Funds
Source Venture Economics/NVCA/Private Equity
Analyst
19
Main developments in the PE market
  • 1940s The American Research and Development
    (ARD) Corp. was established in 1946 to pursue
    investments based on technology developed in
    World War II
  • Almost half of profits in 26-year life came from
    investment in DEC
  • 1950s Not much growth in venture capital
  • Venture capital firms were organized as
    publicly-traded closed-end funds
  • Unscrupulous brokers took advantage of
    inexperienced investors who experienced
    significant losses

20
  • 1960s and early 1970s Not much growth in VC
  • The federal government launched the Small
    Business Investment Companies (SBIC) program in
    1958
  • VC firms obtained generous marching funds or loan
    guarantees through SBIC
  • Again, inexperience and fraud led to significant
    losses
  • Investment in venture capital was flat (about
    2-3bn during 1969-1977)

21
  • 1970s Limited partnerships gained in popularity
    and regulatory and tax changes help PE market
  • 1974 Pass of Employee Retirement Income Security
    Act (ERISA) that attempts to eliminate abuses in
    corporate pension funds by restricting risk
    investments
  • 1978 Prudent man amendment to ERISA allows
    pension funds to invest in riskier assets
  • 1978 1981 Capital gains tax rate reduced from
    49.5 to 28 and then to 20

22
  • 1980s and early 1990s
  • Venture capital financing increases tenfold in
    early 1980s
  • But, funding drops during 1987-1991 due to
    disappointing losses by investors
  • Rise in buyout funds coincided with the rise in
    the high-yield debt market
  • 1990s Dramatic rise in PE market

23
Capital commitments to PE funds
Note 2Q03 values are annualized based on 2003
results.
24
(No Transcript)
25
Venture capital firms
  • VCs differ from banking institutions in a number
    of ways
  • They obtain funds by issuing equity shares on a
    quasi-private basis
  • They specialize in financing very young,
    high-risk firms
  • They accept equity securities in exchange for the
    capital they provide
  • They are much more involved with the management
    of these firms
  • They are less regulated than banks

26
How do VCs value a new venture?
  • It is very difficult to value a young firm that
    has no history of earnings and plans to operate
    in an industry with few existing comparable firms
  • VCs use the venture capital method
  • Estimate the projected earnings of the firm at
    some future date when the VCs want to take the
    firm public, which will be given by the terminal
    value at that date (e.g. 8 years from today)
  • Use a P/E or market-to-book multiple to obtain a
    value for the firm at that date

27
  • Discount the terminal value back to the present
    by using a target rate of return for the VC,
    typically pretty high (50-70 for early ventures,
    30-40 for later ventures)
  • This gives the fair value of the venture today
    and can be used to allocate ownership shares
    among VCs
  • High discount rates are justified due to
  • Premium for risk and illiquidity of investment
  • Value added by VCs
  • Offset for overly optimistic cash flows
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