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Module 4 The Search for Capital. Module 4 Topics Sources of Capital Background Start-up Ongoing Operations Growth.

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Presentation on theme: "Module 4 The Search for Capital. Module 4 Topics Sources of Capital Background Start-up Ongoing Operations Growth."— Presentation transcript:

1 Module 4 The Search for Capital

2 Module 4 Topics Sources of Capital Background Start-up Ongoing Operations Growth

3 Review

4 The Search for Capital We Know That Small Firms need capital don’t have access to capital markets have limited choices owners are often inexperienced

5 The Search for Capital Finance Theories: Common Themes (CAPM, Agency theory, Signaling theory, Pecking order theory) Applicable to large firms, but less applicable to small firms Most firms have a preferred target capital structure Preferred target capital structure may vary by firm Capital structure may affect value cost, collateral, uncertainty, owner preferences) Appropriate capital structure affected by many factors (taxes, cost, collateral, uncertainty, owner preferences)

6 Perspective on Raising Capital http://edcorner.stanford.edu/authorMaterialI nfo.html?mid=1374 (3 minutes)

7 General Sources of Capital EquityPersonal Sources Profits Angel Capital Venture Capital DebtFinancial Institutions Credit Cards Other (Home Equity Loan, Life Insurance) OtherLocal Community Grants and Loans Government Programs Other (customer, suppliers)

8 Common Sources of Start-Up Capital Personal Equity Friends and Family Loans from Financial Institutions Bootstrap Financing

9 Common Sources of Growth Capital “Angel” Investors Venture Capital Sale of Stock Profits

10 Angel Investors Local Wealthy Individuals 234,000 active investors in US Work in informal groups Pool investments 300 informal “angel” groups in US

11 Angel Investors Invest < $1 million dollars Average = $500,000 Annual Angel Investment = VC Investment (2006: 25.6 billion vs $26.1 billion) Invest in 10 times number of firms as VCs (2006: 51,000 firms vs 3522 firms)

12 Angel Investor Expectations Return of > 10 times investment Exit within 5 years Defined exit strategy

13 Finding Angel Investors Not Easy Cluster Personal Network Referrals: attorneys, accountants, bankers Local Associations

14 Angel Investors: Due Diligence Business Plan Product Nature of Opportunity ROI Cashflow Management Team (Background Checks) Exit Opportunity

15 “ Portals” to Angels “Gatekeepers” (Initial introduction) Venture Capital Clubs Regional-Based Groups of Investors Matching Networks

16 Venture Capital: Background Professionally Managed Investment Funds in 2007 $29.4 billion into 3,800 U.S. start-ups in 2007 $6.6 billion in 800 deals in U.S. – 3 rd quarter, 2006 1300 Venture Capital Firms in US Invest in 1 of 400 proposals

17 Venture Capital 35 years VCs > $441 billion > 57,000 companies ½ of IPOs have VC investment Europe (2006)71 billion invested in 2006 8.3%Seed 21% Expansion 70% Buyout financing US (2007)$1.4 billion in China $1.0 billion in India

18 US Venture Capital VC investment down 8.5% - 1st quarter 2008 vs 4 th quarter 2007 (consistent with slowdown of US economy) VCs and angel investors more cautious, pursued later stage investments Shortage of money for seed and early stage ventures US Investment (California, Massachusetts, Texas, Washington, NY) Invested in >1,400 companies Life sciences, clean technology and information technology 55 new venture capital funds

19 Identifying a Venture Capitalist NeedsOfFirmCharacteristics of VC Firm

20 Identifying a Venture Capitalist Stage of Development Amount of Investment Industry Services Offered Reputation Successful Record

21 VC Investment Criteria Entrepreneur Rate of Potential (50%/year) Board of Directors Management Team Intellectual Property Exit Opportunity

22 Venture Capital in Portugal VC sector is one of smallest in OECD relative to size of economy 1999-20020.09% of GDP vs 0.29% of GDP for OECD Dominated by banks and public VC companies

23 Venture Capital Process Screening Due Diligence Deal Structure and Negotiation Post Investment Monitoring

24 VC Due Diligence Management Team Competitive Advantage Growth Potential Exit Opportunity Financial Projections Intellectual Property

25 Venture Capital in Portugal Most investment in Lisbon and Porto 200250% of investments in Lisbon 16% in Porto 23% rest of country 10% other European countries

26 Venture Capital in Portugal Favor expansion stage projects Average deal = 1.2 million Euros (2001) Investments 40% manufacturing 18% services 15% IT 9% retail

27 Going Public Process – –Underwriter – –Security and Exchange Commission – –Road Show Very Expensive (~ $3,000,000 in US)

28 Discussion

29 Assignment How much money to start your proposed business? Where will money come from?


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