Demystifying Venture Capital Economics Part 1
Demystifying Venture Capital Economics Part 1
Demystifying Venture Capital Economics Part 1
com/venture-capital-economics/
The other day my co-founder, Dan Carroll, asked me a number of questions about
Venture Capital returns because he was stunned by the valuations of some
recently announced deals. After I answered the question, Dan and a few
colleagues who were within earshot encouraged me to share my perspective on
the subject because it is so poorly understood.
Much has been written about the financial performance of the companies backed
by venture capitalists, but very little has been written about the economics of the
venture capital industry itself. With this post we open the kimono on who funds
VCs, what returns they expect and how the best VCs consistently succeed in
outperforming those expectations.
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These 20 firms dont change much over time and are so oversubscribed that they are very hard for new limited
partners to access. The premier endowments are considered the most desirable limited partners by venture
capitalists because they are the most committed to the asset class. Even these endowments, though, have a
hard time getting into funds if they werent there in the beginning. Occasionally new firms like Benchmark and
Andreessen Horowitz emerge and break into the top tier, but they are the exception rather than the rule.
These expectations were created when the S&P 500 was expected to return on the order of 12% annually.
These days the expectations baked into market options would lead you to believe the investment public expects
the S&P 500 to return on the order of 6 7% annually. Im not sure what that means for the current appropriate
return expectation, but its still probably at least in the mid teens.
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IRR Analysis: Years Invested vs. Return Multiple
If 20% of a fund is invested in deals that return 10x in five years and everything else results in no value then the
fund would have an annual return of approximately 15%. Few firms are able to generate those returns.
Buyer Beware
Over the past 10 years, venture capital in general has been a lousy place to invest. According to Cambridge
Associates the average annual venture capital return over the past 10 years has only been 8.1% as compared to
5.7% for the S&P 500. That clearly does not compensate the limited partner for taking the increased risk
associated with venture capital. However the top quartile (25%) generated an annual rate of return of 22.9%. The
top 20 firms have done even better.
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Being willing to intelligently take this leap of faith is one of the main differences between the venture firms who
consistently generate high returns and everyone else. Unfortunately human nature is not comfortable taking
risk; so most venture capital firms want high returns without risk, which doesnt exist. As a result they often sit on
the sideline while other people make the big money from things that most people initially think are crazy. The
vast majority of my colleagues in the venture capital business thought we were crazy at Benchmark to have
backed eBay. Beenie babiesreally? How can that be a business? The same was said about Google. Who
needs another search engine. The last six failed. The leader in a technology market is usually worth more than
all the other players in its space combined, so it is not worth backing anyone other than the leader if you want to
generate outsized returns.
Needle In a Haystack?
According to some research I did back in the late 90s, there are only approximately 15, plus or minus 3,
technology companies started nationwide each year that reach at least $100 million in revenue at some point in
their independent corporate life. These companies tend to grow to be much larger than $100 million in revenue
and usually generate return multiples in excess of 40x. Almost every single one of them would have sounded
stupid to you when they started. They dont today. Investing in just one of these companies each year would lead
to a fund with an annual rate of return in excess of 100%.
Speaking of outsized returns, these days the breadth of the Internet has made it possible to generate returns that
were never before imagined. Companies like Airbnb, Dropbox, eBay, Google, Facebook, Twitter and Uber return
more than 1,000 times the VCs investment. That leads to amazing fund returns.
When it comes to investing in venture capital I would follow the old Groucho Marx dictum about never joining a
club that would have you as a member. Beware private wealth managers who offer you access to venture capital
fund of funds. I can assure you, as a past partner of a premier venture capital fund that no firm in the top 20
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would allow a brokerage firm fund of funds to invest in their fund.
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