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Onwards, upwards VC fund commitments!

by Chris Arsenault

March 2009 will definitely be the month the Canadian Venture Capital Industry heard its “wake up” call. Fund of fund initiatives, new funds, follow on funds, co-investment fund, business funds. We got swamped with VC related initiatives and announcments and even withnessed some true initial traction. It was refreshing to read about the Québec Government Venture Capital initiative, done in close partnership with la Caisse de dépôt, the Fond de solidarité FTQ and Investissement Québec, with commitments toward the creation of: a $500M business growth fund, $125M for the creation of three seed stage funds as well as the creation of a $825M Fund of Fund. Now, the latest news comes from Ontario, where the Ontario Venture Capital fund announced, earlier today, that it had completed its first commitment to a private fund manager: Georgian Partners. Below an extract of the press release: 

  

Venture Capital Fund Invests In Jobs Of The Future

McGuinty Government Welcomes First Ontario-Based Commitment.

The Ontario Venture Capital Fund is committing up to $15

million inGeorgian Partners “Growth Fund I” to help support

innovative, high-growth businesses, including high-potential

companies in Ontario.

Georgian Partners (http://www.georgianpartners.com/index.html)

is an Ontario-based venture capital firm investing in companies

in the information technology, information aggregation, and

enterprise software sectors.

 

 

Note that the Ontario Government first announced the creation of its Fund of Fund, in close collaboration with its partners (OMERS, RBC Capital Partners, Manulife Financial, BDC & TD Bank Financial Group) back in June 2008 (Link), a $205M Fund, and, at the time of its announcement, it was one of the biggest to-be active Canadian Fund of Fund  (the Ontario Government commitment was in the order of $90 million). We hadn’t heard much since then nor seen any activity until earlier this month when the Ontario government followed up with the announcement of a new $250M VC fund that would co-investing with other eligible fund managers in emerging technologies (Link). This announcement was quickly followed by other rumors about the first two investment commitments towards private funds by the Ontario Venture Fund (the Fund of Fund) which were rumored to be Kodiak Venture Partners and Mayfield (both US funds). I guess it was just rumors, because today they announced their first commitment, and its towards Ontario based venture capital Georgian Partners.

The level of energy and the willingness coming from large Canadian institutions and government to commit important amounts of capital to Venture Capital is well received by the community. The CVCA and many of its members, have been putting allot effort towards gathering support from large institutions as well as from our governments in order to help address the current lack of funding available to bridge the gap between research and development and the commercialization of promising technologies. If you haven’t yet, take a look at the recently released study on the economic impacts of venture capital: Why Venture Capital is Essential to the Canadian Economy (Link).

Even if all of this sounds really good, I still fear that in the current economic climate, as a VC fund manager, attracting funds from the non-government entities, such as: Pension funds, Insurance Companies, Banks, large corporations, endowment funds… will prove to be at the least extremely difficult.

But we will get there.. only by showing our Canadian existing and potential limited partners, that yes, Venture Capital Funds in Canada can provide strong returns (IRR)!

Onwards, upwards!

Over $1 billion in stimulus for Canadian startups

Repost from Flow Ventures

by Raymond Luk

This is a great time to be building startups in Canada. Ontario and Quebec have recently announced over a $1 billion in funding for new ventures through matching funds and fund-of-funds. There may be more good news when Ontario tables its budget on March 26.

Here’s a quick summary:

Ontario:

Quebec (link to budget):

  • $825 million for a fund-of-funds to invest in 15-20 VC funds ($700 million from the government, $125 million from the private sector)
  • $125 million for the creation of 3 seed funds ($100 from the government, $25 from the private sector)
  • 10-year provincial tax holiday for new ventures that commercialize research from a Quebec university or research centre

So how does this trickle down to startups?

  1. If you’re raising your first round it means there will be more seed funding sources and more money in existing funding sources. Private investors may be more willing to invest since the government is matching their dollars 1 to 1 or 2 to 1 in some cases.
  2. If you already have investment it means your investors may be more likely to top-up if they are on the receiving end of these funds.
  3. If you’re commercializing research, which Canada does a poor job of, you look a lot more attractive to investors. Not paying provincial corporate tax for 10 years has a huge effect on investor returns (assuming you’re planning on profitability).

The best part of these initiatives is that they support the existing investment ecosystem rather than trying to replace it with something government run. We already have the pleasure, privilege and intestinal fortitude to deal with the government for SRED and other subsidies. Best leave investment to experienced managers.

So is there any bad news? Timing will be an issue as nobody can deploy this much money quickly. It’ll be awhile before funds actually trickle down to companies. I personally don’t like any initiative with a geographical limitation. I understand the desire to create jobs in a particular place but technology companies can be spread out. In Canada, where we don’t have the density of markets and talent, an Ontario-only company doesn’t make sense.

But enough complaining. Does this mean that we at Flow are more likely to make investments in the near future? You bet!

 

A new $825M Fund for Venture Capital to be put in place by Quebec Government

Posted by Chris Arsenault

What do you think, can local Governments play leading roles in the Venture Capital Community?

Earlier today, the Quebec Finance Minister Monique Jérôme-Forget presented here budget in which she outlines the $15-billion stimulus package. Budget 2009-2010. I believe this is great news for Quebec, for Canada and the whole Venture Capital Community, will funds be managed by private fund managers? 

We find in this Budget many changes and numerous proposed solutions for critical sectors of the economy. But the two initiatives that captured my attention are 1) the creation of the new $825M Venture Capital Fund (or will it be a Fund of Fund?) and 2) a $500M emergency Fund for businesses. Of course we have yet to see the details and inter-workings of such a Fund, but I would guess that these monies will provide some level of continuity to Venture Capital Fund managers and potentially direct investments as well. So this is great news as long as the capital being put at work is done through proper management of such funds.

Over the last few years, The Solidarity Fund, the FondAction CSN, Desjardins Capital and the Caisse de Dépot have been hard at work figuring out ways to help entrepreneurs and business owners out. They have played a crucial/leading role in support of the Canadian Private Equity & Venture Capital industry.  Their efforts are now joined by a clear and strong commitment to Venture Capital by the Quebec Government. This news comes a day after the Ontario Budget and announcement of their own co-investment fund in the amount of $250M.

I look forward to soon be witnessing a revived Canadian Venture Capital Ecosystem through  (mostly) an indirect involvement by our governments into businesses through their direct commitment as limited partners into leading private venture capital fund managers across Canada.

Here are a few key highlights of 2009-2010 Quebec budget (as outlined by the Montreal Gazette):

- $15-billion economic stimulus package;

- $3.9-billion deficit budget;

- Quebec Stock Savings Plan, returns, tax deductions for stock market investments;

- Quebec sales tax will rise to 8.5 per cent in 2011;

- Indexing of fees, from birth certificates to driver’s licences, in 2011;

- $500 million more for job re-training;

- $1.5-billion more for health, $490 million more for education;

- A $500-million emergency fund, for businesses;

- A $825-million venture-capital fund, for businesses;

- $2,000 increase in tax credit for child-care expenses;

- Program to eliminate elder abuse;

- $1.6-billion more for Generations Fund over two years, to offset Quebec’s growing debt;

- Crack down on “aggressive tax planning” to curb tax evasion;

- 3,000 more low-cost housing units.

 

Copy of the CVCA Letter to Premier Dalton McGuinty regarding the critical situation facing Ontario’s venture capital industry.

 March 16, 2009

Premier Dalton McGuinty

Government of Ontario

Legislative Building, Queen’s Park

Toronto, Ontario

M7A 1A1

 

Dear Mr. Premier,

 

On behalf of Canada’s Venture Capital and Private Equity Association (CVCA), I would like to draw your attention to the critical situation facing Ontario’s venture capital industry.  The current severe economic downturn is further exacerbating an already difficult fund raising and investing environment and risks compromising our collective ability to fund the industries of tomorrow.

 

Venture capital (VC) firms generally focus on entrepreneurial and fast growing small businesses in the technology arena, including information and communications technology, life sciences and biotechnology, alternative energy and clean tech.  Perhaps the best known Canadian VC success story is Research in Motion, which has fundamentally changed the way we work and communicate while at once creating tens of thousands of jobs and serving as an engine for Canada’s economy.

 

The CVCA has recently released a study on the economic impacts of venture capital.  This study has been led by the CVCA with the financial support of Ontario, several other provincial governments and the federal government.  This study clearly shows that venture capital in Canada has resulted in the creation of close to 150,000 jobs and an additional 1% to Canada’s GDP.  In addition, according to the Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC), 700,000 Canadians work in the broader information technology and communications technology sectors.

 

This record reflects the specialized business-building skills that Canada’s venture capital firms bring to their portfolio companies.  It is also a measure of our long-term focus, astute risk management and strong sense of corporate responsibility and accountability to stakeholders.

 

While the venture capital industry has been a key driver of Ontario’s prosperity, our members are currently facing significant challenges that we believe require government action.  At a time when our economy urgently needs new success stories like RIM, ATI, Open Text, Cognos and Corel, we believe that it is vital for the government to address the: 

 

Current lack of funding available to bridge the gap between research and development and the commercialization of promising technologies;

 

Existing obstacles to foreign investment

 

Each of these challenges is presented below along with a proposed approach to form the basis for a more detailed discussion.

 

Access to Funding

Given the current economic environment, fundraising in our sector reached new lows in 2008.  The ability of funds to raise new capital impacts their capacity as financial intermediaries to make investments into promising companies.  Because of the increasing difficulties in fundraising, between 2003 and 2008, venture capital investment in Ontario dropped to $99 million in Q 4, 2008, down precipitously from $177 million in Q 3, 2008 and from $217 million in Q 4, 2007.

 

The lack of capital available to venture capital investors reflects the broader market volatility and the new market realities.  Institutional investors such as pension funds have incurred considerable losses in their public equity portfolios, which in turn has resulted in a corresponding lower allocation to venture capital and private equity.  Additionally, individual investors are increasingly reticent to invest in publicly-traded vehicles such as Labour-Sponsored Venture Capital Corporations, for a variety of reasons, including the gradual withdrawal of tax incentives for investing in the asset class.

 

Simply, the lack of capital is putting Ontario’s innovation at risk.  Without funding, there is an increasing and very real risk that Ontario will not be able to fully capitalize on and benefit from its multi-billion dollar investment in research and development.

 

We note that the federal government has already taken significant steps towards improving SMEs’ access to credit.  However, the fastest-growing, most export intensive Canadian SMEs are disproportionately backed by equity infusions from venture capital funds.  The current economic environment is depriving venture capital funds of their ability to raise capital, thereby robbing our most promising SMEs of the opportunity to grow.

 

A practical commercialization support program will ensure that more of Ontario’s enterprising companies are able to realize their full potential, which will help to strengthen Ontario’s competitiveness in the global, knowledge-based economy of the 21st century.  The CVCA recommends the following initiatives: 

  • Setting up a federal $300-million, third-party managed fund of funds similar to the fund recently-established by Ontario to help fuel the growth of vibrant, leading-edge companies;
  • Doubling the size of the Ontario venture fund through a direct injection of $200 million in government funding;
  • Improving the federal Scientific Research and Experimental Development program (SR&ED) so that for every $1 of approved claims,$1.50 is returned to the company, thereby stimulating its growth and development; Ontario’s support on this score would be welcome;
  • Enabling greater use of government procurement/offsets to encourage domestic as well as foreign multinational investment in domestic venture capital funds; and
  • Creating an incentive for large Ontario corporations to invest in domestic VC funds, where an investment in a VC fund would receive the same tax treatment that is currently available for in-house research and development.

 These measures would benefit Ontario’s technology firms as well as its venture capital funds in both the short and medium term and would improve our collective ability to achieve the longer-term innovation and productivity goals that are necessary to maintain the province’s competitiveness in the global economy.

 

Removing Remaining Obstacles to Foreign Investment

 

Foreign venture capital investment has historically been an important contributor to the success of emerging Canadian companies.   However, at the end of the fourth quarter of 2008, foreign venture capital investment in Canada fell 56% in 2008 relative to 2007, the lowest level in five years.  Moreover, this trend appears to be accelerating.

 

We encourage the government to examine ways to improve Ontario’s and Canada’s investment appeal.  The CVCA shares the analysis of the situation put forth by the recently-released federal Advisory Panel on Canada’s System of International Taxation, namely that the current Section 116 process “may negatively affect Canada’s ability to access foreign capital, particularly by private companies.” (p.91). The Advisory Panel’s Recommendation 7.4 that deals with this matter is, regrettably, insufficient to deal with the problems encountered by our members and by the foreign investors with whom they deal.

 

Canada currently defines taxable Canadian property to include shares of a private corporation resident in Canada.  At the same time, Canada’s tax treaties cede taxing jurisdiction to the country where the non-resident vendor is resident, provided the shares do not derive their value principally from real property.  Based on the large number of tax treaties Canada has concluded, it appears that Canada is prepared to exempt from taxation all gains realized by non-residents, other than the gains from the disposition of real property.

 

In light of this treaty policy, we believe that Canada should adopt a broader exemption in its domestic law to exempt gains realized by non-residents other than those arising from the disposition of real property.

 

We see little benefit in providing the exemption only on a bilateral basis.  The benefit of a broader exemption is that it would make Canada a more attractive destination for equity investments by non-residents and, in particular, venture capital and private equity funds.  A broader exemption would also reduce a significant compliance burden that acts as an impediment to foreign direct investment in Canada.  Unfortunately, recently enacted changes regarding the Section 116 clearance certificate process did not address the issue and are unlikely to reduce the number of situations involving arm’s length transactions in which clearance certificates are obtained.  We recommend amending the definition of taxable Canadian property so as not to include the shares of a private corporation resident in Canada other than when such shares derive their value principally from real property in Canada.

 

This proposed solution would put an end to the onerous Section 116 compliance requirements (except for real property), should not result in any significant tax revenue loss and would mirror the practices of most leading international jurisdictions.

 

We would strongly urge Ontario to continue to press the federal government to remove the Section 116 obstacles to foreign investment.

 

Encouraging Angel Investing

Although it is not within the CVCA’s mandate, we recognize the important role that Angel Investors play in our ecosystem.  Although the CVCA has not taken a formal position on the topic, I will note that one half of U.S. State governments have adopted some sort of “Angel Tax Credit” to stimulate the creation of start-ups.

 

In closing, the strength of our venture capital industry has a direct impact on Canada’s economic health as well as the financial well-being of millions of Ontarians.  At the CVCA, we take this responsibility very seriously. 

 

We would welcome the opportunity to meet with you to further discuss the opportunities and challenges that are outlined in this letter. I can be reached at 416-607-5150 while the CVCA’s Executive Director, Richard Rémillard, can be contacted at 613-744-8969.

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Gregory Smith

President

CVCA

 

http://www.cvca.ca

 

cc. Dwight Duncan

      Minister of Finance

 

     John Wilkinson

     Minister of Research and Innovation

 

Did the Ontario Venture Fund finally pull the trigger?

Re-posted from the Wellington Financial Blog.

The rumours have been churning for weeks that the Ontario Venture Capital Fund has made its first financial commitment to the space, some 18 months  after its launch. The figure isn’t known (US$5 or US$7.5 million perhaps), but most agree that Mayfield Fund  was the first to get the nod from TD Capital Private Equity Partners  on behalf of Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Innovation Minister John Wilkinson.

 

Here’s the skinny on them:

We have over $2.8 billion under management and a team of ten investing professionals. Since our founding in 1969, we have raised 13 funds, invested in more than 500 companies, taken more than 100 public, and nearly 100 have merged or were acquired.

 

Mayfield has a truly great reputation, and one hears that they’ve agreed to open up a one-person office in Toronto as part of the deal. The brightside of all of this is that Toronto may have a new player in town with global links. Prior Mayfield successes include Broadvision, Citrix, Concur, Genentech, Nuance, Sandisk, etc.

 

500 investments over 40 years works out to be 12.5 per annum worldwide, counting both leads and syndicates. Which means, based upon the size of our tech economy relative to the rest of the world, Canadian entrepreneurs might imagine one incremental lead a year from their own backyard as a result of this new footprint.

 

The OVCF was designed to help arrest the death of the local start-up economy (see prior representative post “MRI Fund rumors come true” June 11-08). Critics will wonder why the first venture fund that the Ontario government invested in was an American group (particularly when the 2nd press release said that between “80% and 100%” of the capital would go into “Ontario-focused funds” ), but I find no fault with the concept.

 

The only valid criticism will be that none of this information is ever made public. 1) How can entrepreneurs tap into the Province’s capital if no one knows who is deploying the $205 million of capital and where to access it?; and 2) How can taxpayers track the performance of the strategy if Ontario doesn’t have a specific website dedicated to performance data, as one would find at CPPIB ?

 

Ontario politicians and officials have unwittingly learned two lessons over the past year. First, that it is hard to raise capital: even with the Premier himself making calls, only a few corporate and institutional LPs joined the OVCF (all of which were gov’t regulated). The second closing, which would take the $205 million figure higher, was “anticipated” to happen in 2008  — but never came to pass.

 

And second, when LPs go to commit new capital to the venture space, it is so much easier to “buy IBM” than to support a domestic VC team. This decision makes it a bit more difficult for provincial politicians to criticize the CPP Investment Board for cutting back so dramatically on their Canadian venture investments over the past few years (see prior representative posts “CPPIB general partner Q1 2007 performance numbers” August 26-07 and “Doubling Down on Private Equity at CPP Investment Board” February 20-09).

 

Welcome, Mayfield! The industry is glad to have you onboard. If the rumour that TD Capital Private Equity Partners’ second commitment is also to a U.S.-based venture fund is also true, then the notion that the OVCF was designed to help save the Ontario VC industry will start to unravel in no short order. But that’s no knock on Mayfield’s capabilities.

 

According to the Ontario government’s own stats, venture capital and follow-on financings in Ontario hit a 12 year low in 2008, the year after “first time” VC financings in Ontario reached a similar nadir.

Transplanting the U.S. venture industry to Ontario just isn’t feasible. We still need local managers if Ontario is ever to have an Innovation Economy, whether or not Chrysler’s 3 Ontario-based plants survive the next 36 months. Having almost killed the Labour-sponsored Fund Industry, and agreed that the OVCF isn’t the “silver bullet”, where’s the balance of the Ontario government’s strategy?

 

MRM

 

Why Venture Capital is essential to the Canadian Economy

By Gilles Duruflé

CVCA has just released its comprehensive study on the impact of venture capital in Canada on economy, jobs and innovation.

The report (i) explains what venture capital is and how it adds values, (ii) describes how the Canadian venture capital industry developed compared to the US industry and how it differs from the US, (iii) measures its impact on the Canadian economy in terms of jobs, economic growth, innovation and exports, (iv) through various success stories, illustrates its long term “snowball effect” generating a pool of business angels, entrepreneurs and managerial talent which benefit the next generation of technology start-ups and, finally, (v) underlines the present contraction of the Canadian venture capital industry and its growing gap with the US industry which is a major threat for the Canadian technology and innovation ecosystem.

Here are the major findings

Between 1996 and 2007, Venture Capital investors financed 2,175 technology companies in Canada. 1,740 of those are operating in Canada in 2008. In addition, prior to 1996, it financed 15 companies that are still operating and have sales larger than $ 50 million in 2008.

On average these 1,755 companies have sales of $ 10.5 million and employment of 47 direct jobs. They are a mix of small, medium and large companies.

In aggregate, they generate sales of $ 18.5 billion:

  • $ 15.4 billion in ICT,
  • $ 1.9 billion in Life Sciences,
  • $ 1.0 billion in Other Technologies.

They employ 63,955 people in Canada and 17,760 abroad.

In addition, they generate 83,549 indirect jobs in Canada for a total of 147,504 direct and indirect jobs generated in Canada which represents 1.3% of all private sector employees in Canada. Indirect jobs are jobs generated in other companies through the purchase of goods and services from these companies. They are calculated on the base of industry-weighted employment multipliers provided by Statistics Canada.

The 51,050 direct jobs in Canada in ICT venture capital-backed companies represent 8% of the total sector employment and the 5,069 direct jobs in venture capital-backed Biotechnology companies represent 34% of total employment in that sector (graph 12).

Gross domestic product (GDP) is the measure of total value created in the country during one year. In 2007, the contribution of venture capital-backed companies to the Canadian GDP was    $ 14.5 billion, 0.94% of total GDP: 0.54 % directly through compensation, profits and taxes paid by these companies and 0.40% indirectly through the activity generated in other companies and sectors in Canada due to the goods and services bought by these companies.

The impact of venture capital-backed companies on the Canadian economy is however quite significant: 150,000 jobs (1.3% of all private sector employees) and nearly 1% of GDP. The impact on growth is also important, since venture capital-backed companies which responded to the survey grow more than 5 times faster than the overall economy. Moreover, their impact on innovation (R&D and patents) and exports is very substantial.

There are additional major benefits beyond these economic measures. (i) Successful venture capital-backed companies generate wealth and talent which are reinvested in the next generation of technology start-ups; (ii) they create serial entrepreneurs; (iii) they allow investments by business angels, and (iv) they provide a source of experienced management talent. Alongside business angels, venture capital funds play a critical role in linking these pools of wealth and talent to new start-up companies. This is what we call the “snowball effect” and it is illustrated by the success stories of Q9 Networks, Axcan Pharma, Taleo, Creo and ALI technologies.

But the report makes clear that the picture is not all rosy.  While we know that Canada’s venture capital sector is younger than its American equivalent, the figures in this report demonstrate that venture capital investment in Canada has declined relative to foreign markets. 

In the period from 2003 to the third quarter of 2008, relative to the size of the economy, the investment pace in Canada has been 60% of what it was in the US and the gap is widening.  Between 2003 and the first 3 quarters of 2008:

  • Venture capital investment in the US increased by 17%, from 0.18% to 0.21% of GDP
  • Venture Capital investment in Canada meanwhile decreased by 35%, from 0.13% to 0.085% of GDP and investment by Canadian funds in Canada from 0.10% to 0.06% of GDP

This decline in investment is strongly related to the decline in fund raising by the industry.

Given the importance of venture capital’s impact on innovation and on the overall economy, the report concludes on a call to all parties – governments, investors, venture capital funds and entrepreneurs – to work together to build a strong, permanent, Canadian venture capital industry.

Link to full report ENGLISH FRENCH

 

Another View: V.C. Investing Not Dead, Just Different

Original post on 9 February, 2009

On Dealbook

 

By Alan Patricof

 

Alan Patricof, managing director of Greycroft Partners, a venture capital firm that invests in digital media companies, offers this view of how venture capital investing has been changing:

When we conceived of the idea to start Greycroft Partners, we specifically took into consideration that the paradigm had changed since I first entered the venture capital business in 1969. At that time, and continuing for the next 30 years, the ultimate “win” for a venture capital investment was “going public.” It was tantamount to winning the Triple Crown or being awarded an Oscar for best performance.

At one point, the measurement for going public was merely an exciting technical achievement or a modest amount of revenue. This ultimately transmogrified in the late 1990s to an “idea,” the word Internet attached to the name or description, or some sexy romanticizing of a multiple of future projected revenues.

 

Clearly, West Coast manifestations with brand-name venture capital firms attached to an initial public offering helped to exacerbate the phenomenon of a “hot issue.” Legitimate efforts were made by regulators to control the allocations of these new issues to prevent unfair treatment of the average investor who was shut out of the process and to dampen speculative excesses.

 

Nevertheless, “going public” remained the ultimate goal for most start-ups in spite of the fact that more than one-third of the actual exits for venture capitalists were through mergers and acquisitions. Today, that percentage has shifted even further to 80-20 in favor of M.&A. exits.

 

The underlying support for all of this “irrational exuberance” was the myriad small and mid-sized investment banking firms that thrived across the country in the 1970s and 1980s, primarily in New York City and San Francisco, but also in hometown America. They included names like C.E. Unterberg Towbin; Marron, Eden & Sloss; Carter Berlind; Potoma & Weill; Fahnestock; Wessels, Arnold; Adams Harkness & Hill; Robertson Stephens; Montgomery Securities (the old firm with that name);Laird & Company; D.H. Blair; Raymond James; Black & Company; Robinson Humphrey; Loeb Rhoades & Company; G.H. Walker and, of course, Hambrecht & Quist.

 

These names filled the map with a whole slew of firms willing to take you public with a good story, raising $10 million, $5 million or even $2 million, with a total market value of $10 million to $50 million. It was a great time to be in the venture business and young companies had access to angels, A rounds, B rounds and I.P.O.s at a relatively young age of development. The biotechnology, semiconductor, disc drive and personal computer industries were nurtured on a system of raising capital that supported young companies with access to capital. It was the time of Data General, DEC, Intel, Genentech andSeagate, to mention just a few.

 

Small investment firms were the lifeblood of the new-issue business. They not only took these companies public, but also made aftermarkets in the shares, at often-times egregious spreads, which created a viable aftermarket and generated sufficient profits to make up for the small floats. This trading “over the counter,” as it was referred to, was done over the phone. When markets went down, one would often hear “1,000 shares offered — no bids.” It was in many respects the Wild West.

 

Electronic trading and the development of Nasdaq gradually served to reduce these spreads on net trades and lowered commission rates for the others. This made for a somewhat more orderly market, but also reduced profitability on individual transactions for the underwriting firms and market makers.

I remember specifically taking a medical electronics company, Datascope, public in 1971 through C.E. Unterberg Towbin with an initial offering of 100,000 shares at $19 a share. The total market capitalization was $10 million. The same firm had brought Intel public the year before with a not much greater offering and market value.

 

It wasn’t until the 1980s and 1990s, when offering sizes began to increase, that big investment firms like Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and First Boston started to recognize the potential in the market for young venture-backed companies. Such names as Diasonics, Cordis, Cisco and Network Appliance, along with Apple, AOL andMicrosoft, made for a robust marketplace.

 

In the late 1990s, the market for high-tech I.P.O.s reached a series of crescendos with valuations based on multiples of projected revenues in the hereafter. It was a heady time and reached such levels that new issues were often oversubscribed by multiples of 5 to 10 times, and there was no easier way to get rich quick than by getting an allocation of an I.P.O.

 

During this period, the game gradually changed as many of the aforementioned smaller investment firms either went out of business or merged with one of the “four horsemen” as they were commonly known, or a handful of other survivors.

 

The character of the Nasdaq market also changed. The big players began to assume a more significant role towards the latter half of the 1990s as the size of offerings increased to $25 million, $50 million or even $100 million, with valuations of $200 million, $500 million or even $1 billion, partly because there was so much demand for the new flavor of the day — the Internet — with all its hyperbole of promise of growth and riches.

 

But the larger the deal, the greater the capital requirements for underwriting and making aftermarkets. The economics of the business had changed and it was no longer possible to do small deals, so small firms could not compete. The bubble finally burst in 2001 and virtually overnight the I.P.O. market dried up as the public realized that in many cases “the emperor had no clothes.”

 

This situation was exacerbated by a gradual reduction in the pool of analysts who covered small companies with small market capitalizations, as the costs just were not justified by the volume of trading. In addition, the regulators put up Chinese walls between the bankers and the analysts, making it much more difficult to follow small companies. Many companies that had managed to go public found they had no coverage and few market makers. Their shares gradually became part of the living dead: a public company with all the attendant regulatory requirements and no interest from investors.

 

The collapse of the Internet bubble only served to compound the problem as public interest in I.P.O.s dwindled to a trickle as their losses increased. Then, in 2002, in the wake of the Enron, WorldCom and Tyco debacles, the government intervened with the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which imposed tougher rules on corporations. This only added further to the cost of an I.P.O. in terms of legal and accounting requirements for both the issuer and underwriter.

 

The sum and substance of all of these developments is that the minimum economic level to bring a company public today is at least a $50 million offering at a $250 million market value. With realism back in the market and a return to rational metrics, like multiples of revenues and, better yet, profits, venture capitalists have had to face the hard reality that it is highly unlikely that taking a company from start-up to a point where it can justify this type of market capitalization in a three-, five- and even seven-year time frame is realistic, except in a limited number of situations.

 

For these reasons, I believe that the paradigm has changed for the venture business. We can no longer realistically expect the same kinds of absolute returns that were achieved in the past through a quick turnaround from start-up to liquidity through an I.P.O. Rather, I believe that most of the companies that venture capitalists are funding today will find an exit through merger or acquisition. And if we expect to achieve a return in a reasonable time frame of three to five years, we are probably looking at a sale price of $20 million to $100 million. This is the valuation range where most young companies are being acquired.

 

To compensate for these lower gross return expectations, we must establish initial valuations, usually in the single digits, that can provide an adequate multiple return and internal rate of return. Inevitably, this suggests that a true venture capital firm should be reverting to smaller-scale funds and restricting individual investments in early-stage companies to accommodate the realities of the exit opportunity. Larger funds can focus on later-stage growth opportunities that can absorb greater amounts of capital where there still exists the possibility of taking companies public in a timely manner.

 

This, in turn, requires a more disciplined approach to investing. Entrepreneurs must be guided to use capital more efficiently and we must avoid falling into the trap of C, D and even E and F rounds of funding, with successive layers of participating preferred, in order to prove an ill-conceived concept is viable. Equally concerning are the myriad projects that should not appropriately be financed in the first place by a venture capitalist. (I worry about the myriad alternative energy companies that seem to be the next wave of capital-consuming enterprises that may just be beyond our capabilities in view of the limited exit opportunities.)

 

Entrepreneurs themselves seem to be catching onto the new risk/reward equation and seem far more willing, at an early stage, to opt for a sale at a lower valuation and lock in their gains, figuring that they are young and can repeat the process later with another start-up.

 

If the scenario I have described strikes a chord of reality, then until someone solves the cost of going public and increases the liquidity in aftermarket trading, we as an industry have to downsize our expectation for exits as well as downsize the size of our funds. We still can produce significant returns for investors, but we cannot accommodate the size to which funds have grown in the past decade.

Venture capital is definitely not dead or even ill; rather it has just taken on a new set of dynamics. Entrepreneurs in this country are stronger than ever, and venture capitalists are the ones to nurture them!

 

Entrepreneurs, Persistence and Impact on the Economy

Original post on 9 February, 2009

http://blog.techcapital.com/2009/02/09/entrepreneurs-persistence-and-impact-on-the-economy/

By Jacqui Murphy

February 9th, 2009 Jacqui Posted

We work everyday with entrepreneurs who are battling on the frontlines of this economy. It seems that as the news gets worse and worse, these entrepreneurs and management teams are getting even stronger, more focused, and more creative.

It has never been more apparent to me that entrepreneurs and people who choose to work for emerging technology companies thrive in challenging situations, and they do not frighten easily.

Entrepreneurs are going to build Canada out of this recession and they are using everything they can as ammunition.

I thought I’d start a list of “weapons” available to Canadian entrepreneurs:

  1. There is amazing talent on the street right now. Many of these folks have received severance packages and are approaching the job market with “flexibility” in mind. Reach out to these people and engage with them as advisors, employees who are interested in working for equity, and/or potential co-founders/partners.
  2. Map your industry ecosystem, identify strategic partners and customers, prioritize them, and use FREE social media tools (LinkedInTwitter) to reach out, ask for introductions, and ask for help — shorten your path to market any way you can.
  3. Attend the “unconferences” (StartupCampBarCampDemoCampmesh) to meet people like you who are wanting to roll up their sleeves and help others (and themselves) build companies with limited resources. These entrepreneurs are not waiting around for venture capital, they are building in the absence of financing with customers, value propositions, revenue and profits in mind.
  4. Look to existing government programs for support. Make sure you are filing forSR&ED Credits and applying for the Ontario Interactive Digital Media Tax Credit. Introduce yourself to your local IRAP and OCE representatives to see if they have any programs you might qualify for.
  5. Reach out to MaRSCommunitech, and OCRI and hook in to their Entrepreneur-In-Residence programs. These organizations are very knowledgeable about tools that are available to entrepreneurs and they know how to efficiently access a number of government programs.
  6. Check out the Microsoft BizSpark program for free development resources and support.

I will be adding to this list as I come across other resources — please do the same.

Venture returns shine through

Original post on 4 February, 2009

http://www.wellingtonfund.com/blog/2009/02/04/venture-returns-shine-through

By Mark McQueen

I was asked to attend a meeting last month with a well-known academic. The topics centred around venture capital returns, labour-sponsored fund structures (LSIF), and the wisdom of concept that “less venture capital means better venture capital”.

It wasn’t the most productive of meetings. The Phd Professor didn’t seem interested in being challenged, and since I hadn’t read EVERYTHING he had written over the prior 10 years, we were somehow not appropriately equipped to engage him on his points of view.

Although not uncommon his thesis is remarkably simplistic, despite the attempts to dress it up in Ivy-covered complexity: the world needs more funds such as Sequoia and Kleiner Perkins, not small Canadian venture funds and LSIFs. The LSIF model drives him particularly crazy, primarily because no where else in the industrialized world is the approach utilized.

I took exception to that, citing the U.S. business development companies and the U.K. governments’ fostering of that VC market as examples of retail participation. “Those haven’t worked out, either” was the reply.

And then there’s the issue of returns. One of the key complaints by marquee academics and the C.D. Howe Institute has been that the Canadian venture fund returns are “poor” (see prior post “What do LPs want?” June 4-08). I pointed out to the Professor that venture and LSIF returns certainly swamped the S&P, NASDAQ, the Russell 2000, etc.

“Ya, now that the market has crashed,” was the rebuttal. Not true, but I bit my tongue. Venture returns exceeded all other asset classes long before the Dow and TSX crashed (see prior post “Buyout vs. Venture returns” February 20-08).

VCs have to suffer for the impact that the Tech bubble burst has had on their post-2000 returns, but public market PMs get a free pass when their market explodes? Reminds me of the scientists who throw out trial data that doesn’t fit their conclusion.

Over the past week, the Q3 2008 private equity and venture capital returnshttp://i.ixnp.com/images/v3.66.1/t.gif have been released, and they continue to tell the tale. Venture capital still beats Buyout and Public Market Investing over the long term. And, for the first time in a while, the one year returns are also superior:

All Venture:

1 year: (1.6%)
3 year: 6.6%
5 year: 8.6%
10 year: 17.3%
20 year: 17.1%

All Buyout:

1 year: (8.2%)
3 year: 7.2%
5 year: 12.2%
10 year: 7.3%
20 year: 11.2%

NASDAQ:

1 year: (21.4%)
3 year: (1.1%)
5 year: 3.1%
10 year: 2.1%
20 year: 8.7%

S&P 500:

1 year: (22.0%)
3 year: (1.7%)
5 year: 3.2%
10 year: 1.4%
20 year: 7.5%

One subset of the buyout figures is particularly striking. The one year return for “Mega Buyout” funds (more than US$1 billion under management) are negative 9.7%; a performance far worse than every venture category early/balanced/late stage. Which means that anybody who put more than $5 billion of commitments into that particular class in 2006 and 2007 is unhappy. Both in absolute and relative ways.

Which large Canadian institution was writing those cheques, while backing away from venture at the same time? If you are a regular around this space, you won’t even require a clue.

MRM

How friendly was the Budget to Canada’s Innovation Economy?

Posted on 29 January, 2009

Original post: http://www.wellingtonfund.com/blog/2009/01/28/how-friendly-was-the-budget-to-canadas-innovation-economy/

By Mark McQueen

It was quite the scene in Ottawa yesterday (see prior post “Blogging the budget” January 26-09). Knowing that the Opposition parties might bring down the government over the budget added an unusual level of excitement to a City that rarely sees an increase in its collective “heartbeat”.

The Hy’s restaurant in Ottawa has long served as the meeting place for the government of the day. Former PM Jean Chretien was a regular while he was in office. Last night was not any different. NDP leader Jack Layton was wandering around the bar, which was a strange sight indeed. More than a few of the real hitters were out and about. While Canada’s best lobbyists were holding court at perhaps a half dozen different tables. Most everyone seemed pleased with how the day had gone; except for Mr. Layton, of course, who had already told voters two weeks ago that he’d be voting against the budget.

For Canada’s technology, biotech, lifescience, Angel and venture capital community, however, there will probably be a lot of long faces this morning. Try as the Canadian Venture Capital & Private Equity Association (CVCAhttp://i.ixnp.com/images/v3.64/t.gif) might, there appears to be nothing in the budget that will directly support the smart-up and VC sectors. There is much written about “innovation”, and groups such as NRC and centres of higher learning saw some new capital or programs to suit them, but the four ideas put forward by the CVCA several weeks ago didn’t appear (see prior post “CVCA letters to Messers Flaherty, Clement and Ignatief” December 26-08). Even the infamous “section 116″ issue didn’t merit a mention, despite the fact that lawyers will tell you the 2008 budget fix didn’t do the trick.

Here is an excerpt from the CVCA press release from last eveninghttp://i.ixnp.com/images/v3.64/t.gif:

“Unfortunately, the budget has failed to address the current shortage of venture capital financing, which presents a significant challenge to near-term job creation and to Canada’s future prosperity in the important knowledge-based economy.”

Canada’s venture capital sector fosters emerging companies in the life sciences, high-tech, biotech and clean tech industries. Canadian companies backed by venture capital generate sales of $18.3 billion and directly and indirectly employ almost 148,000 Canadians. But venture capital investment and fundraising levels have been declining for years and are now reaching critical lows. In the fourth quarter of 2008, venture capital investment was down 40% from the same period in 2007.

It was a missed opportunity, but perhaps the issues facing the Canadian economy swamp the crisis that the start-up and VC industry are currently living through.

For those of you who haven’t taken the time to spin through the budget documenthttp://i.ixnp.com/images/v3.64/t.gif, here is the summary of excerpts that might be directly relevant to anyone in the Innovation Economy:

- Clean Energy Fund: “$1 billion over five years to support clean energy technologies. This includes $150 million over five years for research, and $850 million over five years for the development and demonstration of promising technologies, including large-scale carbon capture and storage projects. This support is expected to generate a total investment in clean technologies of at least $2.5 billion over the next five years.”

- 100% write-off for new computer hardware and software: “We will also provide a temporary, 100-per cent CCA depreciation rate for eligible computer hardware and software acquired over the next two years.

- “Increasing the amount of income eligible for the small-business tax rate, $400,000 to $500,000.”

- “Providing $110 million over three years to the Canadian Space Agency to support the development of advanced robotics and
other space technologies.”

- “$200 million over two years, starting in 2009–10, to the National Research Council’s Industrial Research Assistance Program
to enable it to temporarily expand its initiatives for small and medium-sized enterprises. This includes $170 million to double the program’s contributions to companies, and $30 million to help companies hire over 1,000 new postsecondary graduates, including graduates from business schools, to implement more effective business processes and strategies, and develop new innovative
products and services that companies can bring to the marketplace.”

- Green Infrastructure Fund: “Targeted investments in green infrastructure can improve the quality of the environment and will lead to a more sustainable economy over the longer term. Green infrastructure includes infrastructure that supports a focus on the creation of sustainable energy. Sustainable energy infrastructure, such as modern energy transmission lines, will contribute
to improved air quality and lower carbon emissions. Budget 2009 provides $1 billion over five years for a Green Infrastructure
Fund. Funding will be allocated based on merit to support green infrastructure projects on a cost-shared basis.”

- The Canada Foundation for Innovation is a not-for-profit corporation that supports the modernization of research infrastructure at Canadian universities, colleges, research hospitals and other not-for-profit research institutions across Canada. To date, the Government’s contributions, along with other partners, have supported more than 6,000 projects at 120 research institutions across Canada that are creating world-leading research capacity in Canada and developing, attracting and retaining top
research talent. Consistent with its Science and Technology Strategy, the Government is committed to continue providing support for leading-edge research infrastructure through the Canada Foundation for Innovation. The Foundation will develop a strategic plan to guide its activities and future competitions beyond 2010. The plan will be developed in collaboration with the Minister of Industry. In order to accelerate investments in leading-edge facilities and equipment, Budget 2009 provides $150 million to increase the funding available for meritorious projects in the 2009 Leading Edge and New Initiatives Funds Competition. In addition, Budget 2009 provides $600 million for future activities of the Foundation, including the launch of one or more new competitions by December 2010 in support of areas of priority identified by the Minister of Industry in consultation with the Canada Foundation for Innovation, and guided by the Foundation’s strategic plan.”

- “The Institute for Quantum Computing is a research institute based at the University of Waterloo campus in Waterloo, Ontario. Its objective is to create a unique environment for physicists, mathematicians, engineers, and computer scientists to advance the fields of quantum information and quantum computation. Budget 2009 will provide $50 million to the Institute to support the construction and establishment of a new world-class research facility that will contribute to achieving the goals of the Government’s science and technology strategy.”

- “Budget 2009 provides Canada Health Infoway with $500 million to support the goal of having 50 per cent of Canadians with an electronic health record by 2010. In addition, this funding will be used to speed up the implementation of electronic medical record systems for physicians and integrated points of service for hospitals, pharmacies, community care facilities and patients. An electronic medical record system allows doctors and other health care providers to chart patient health information using
a computer, thereby avoiding duplication of testing and helping to ensure patient safety and effective treatment. This $500-million investment will not only enhance the safety, quality and efficiency of the health care system, but will also result in a significant positive contribution to Canada’s economy, including the creation of thousands of sustainable, knowledge-based jobs throughout Canada.”

- “The Government is committed to closing the broadband gap in Canada by encouraging the private development of rural broadband infrastructure. Budget 2009 provides $225 million over three years to Industry Canada to develop and implement a strategy on extending broadband coverage to all currently unserved communities beginning in 2009–10.”

MRM
(disclosure – I’m on the board of the CVCA)