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Professional Venture Capital 1 ENTREPRENEURIAL FINANCE
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Venture Capitalists (VCs): individuals who join in formal, organized firms to raise and distribute venture capital to new and fast-growing ventures Pre-World War II Era: Most venture investing came from wealthy individuals and families 1946: Beginning of Professional VCs Formation of American Research & Development (ARD) 2
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ARD’s Early Performance $3.5 million was raised ($2 million from institutional investors) By end of 1947, ARD had invested in eight ventures, six of which were startups By 1951 the performance was still lack-luster (stock price was at $19 down from the initial offering price of $25 in 1946) 3
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1953: Small Business Administration (SBA) was formed Legislation permitted the federal government to actively engage in fostering new business formation 1958: SBA Created Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs) Due to tax and leverage advantages, the SBIC became the primary vehicle for professionally managed venture capital 4
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ARD’s Later Performance: In 1957, ARD had invested $70,000 in the startup company Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) 1972, ARD was sold for $813 Per Share Original ARD investors received a compound annual return of 14.7% due primarily to DEC Without the DEC investment, the rate of return would have been only 7.4% 5
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Late 1960s-Early 1970s: Boom-Bust Cycle: Many SBICs began having operating problems due to the mixing of risky venture investments & high financial leverage (debt service commitments) 1970s: Professional VC organizational structure changes Movement to private partnerships from public firms & volatile financial markets 6
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Carried Interest: portion of profits paid to the professional venture capitalist as incentive compensation Two and Twenty Shops: investment management firms having a contract that gives them a 2% of assets annual management fee and 20 percent carried interest 9
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Capital Call: when the venture fund calls upon the investors to deliver their investment funds Common to require subsequent investments consistent with the levels of investors’ initial contributions 11
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Deal flow: flow of business plans and term sheets involved in the venture capital investing process Due diligence (in venture investing context): process of ascertaining the viability of a business plan 12
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1. The Industry 2. Stage of the Business 3. Size of the Investment 4. Geographic Area 13
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1. Seek lead investor position 2. Seek a non-lead investor position 3. Refer venture to more appropriate financial market participants 4. SLOR (standard letter of rejection) the venture 14
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Term Sheet: summary of the investment terms and conditions accompanying an investment Typical Issues Addressed in a Term Sheet Valuation Ongoing funding needs Size and staging of financing Preemptive rights on new issues Commitments for future financing rounds and performance conditions Form of security or investment Redemption rights and responsibilities 15
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Typical Issues Addressed in a Term Sheet Dividend structure (Number of VCs and outsiders) Additional management Conversion value protection Registration rights Exit conditions and strategy IPO-dictated events (e.g. conversion) Co-sale rights (with founders) Lock-up provisions 16
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Typical Issues Addressed in a Term Sheet Employment contracts Incentive options Founder employment conditions: compensation, benefits, duties, firing conditions, repurchase of stock at termination, term of agreement, post-employment activities and competition Founder stock vesting Confidentiality agreements and protection for intellectual property 17
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