Newsletter Subject

Next Wave: Should venture capital be like private equity?

From

bigcabal.com

Email Address

abraham@bigcabal.com

Sent On

Sun, Feb 12, 2023 04:37 PM

Email Preheader Text

To VC or to PE? Questions, questions, questions! via For every action, there is an equal and opposit

To VC or to PE? Questions, questions, questions! [Read the newsletter in your browser.](=.7cSB9McaC2_xk1MCXvVNN1s9EmwLsu2GXdizcvNAK_o) [Next Wave Logo] 12 February 2023 Next Wave: Should VC become PE? Questions, questions, questions? | Photo: [Javier Allegue Barros](=.XHeZTGKpSUsVAQ7CUzdbKH_oVQ2w68MqM53Eqcl60Qc) via [Unsplash](=.IJKzBGDPQgrDK6wzM3uuHBwzA-SXf-e7PuBwfpP-wJI) For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This is the equal and opposite side of last week's argument for venture capital to copy PE. --------------------------------------------------------------- Last week I suggested that venture capital might benefit from [taking on some characteristics](=.Lk0dlZ_WVIIoHK9Ic_28lyxhS1xtYcd8kZ4X7Xvc-I8) of private equity in order to improve exit chances. From the feedback I received, it is clear that many investors are thinking in this direction. Ola Brown, founding partner at Healthcare Capital Africa had written [a note](=.y5Ynm17mu7gh8UBgyAdKPfja2GcGSnDoLw0MMMeynms) on LinkedIn outlining venture capital’s shift towards a private equity approach to evaluating investments. “I do believe that the asset class is evolving for legal reasons as well to improve its returns/performance. I outlined a greater and more objective focus on revenue/potential revenue as a basis for valuations, deeper and more extensive due diligence and improved corporate governance,” she wrote. Managing partner at Lateral Frontiers Capital, Rob Eloff, agrees. In 5 places to escape to this investment winter, he wrote “The reset in valuations and macroeconomic outlook has challenged us to reflect on headwinds and opportunities for innovation.” He goes on to list five thematic investment destinations that African investors may want to take a closer look at in 2023. In discussing his third theme, “Private equity in overdrive, Eloff points out that growth private equity activity in the US has “ratcheted up over the past 6 months with strategies to take bloated moderate growers private or to recapitalize strong technology stacks that require business model pivots”. Managing partner at Lateral Frontiers Capital, Rob Eloff, agrees. In [5 places to escape to this investment winter](=.j5E3sForsaQfF9GVxa_fBS9apL33ggJP5pUqug-WMqY), he wrote “The reset in valuations and macroeconomic outlook has challenged us to reflect on headwinds and opportunities for innovation.” He goes on to list five thematic investment destinations that African investors may want to take a closer look at in 2023. In discussing his third theme, “Private equity in overdrive, Eloff points out that growth private equity activity in the US has “ratcheted up over the past 6 months with strategies to take bloated moderate growers private or to recapitalize strong technology stacks that require business model pivots”. Eloff expects this type of increased activity from private equity firms. Indeed the recently concluded $400 million funding of Egypt’s MNT Halan involved a $260 million secondary transaction that saw a group of private equity investors exchanging stakes in the company at a reported $1 billion valuation, post-money. Consequently, the Lateral Frontiers boss makes the case for leading US PE firms to look towards Africa for deals. A selection of private equity firms that have crossed into venture capital, directly or indirectly. | Chart by Mobolaji Adebayo – TechCabal Insights Personally, I don’t expect much in the way of PE firms buying African tech companies. Private equity is itself from certified good health coming out of the last two years of the reign of cheap money. There are a lot of unrealised gains and unhealthy leverage that may prompt LP withdrawals. We’ve seen some of this hit larger firms like Blackstone. This aside, PE firms become interested in deals that they can conservatively estimate upwards of 20% internal rates of return (IRR). One important component of PE dealing is the availability of cheap leverage. That door is not very open and with it, IRRs of greater than 20% in the vast majority of overpriced deals now in the market. African venture capital will need to save itself. Hence my proposal that we borrow some PE methodology not necessarily PE methods. But not everyone agrees. --------------------------------------------------------------- Partner Message [Flutterwave $end-ad] Receive money from family and friends living abroad in minutes this holiday season with $end. Visit send.flutterwave.com and do it now! [Go to $end](=.Hh1DAOBeXg9S-8HKuC_JCcu8dAm2Gjy-3tcgsw0HzAA) “There is a great gulf fixed betwixt us” Following my piece last week, I had a conversation with Ido Sum, a partner at TLcom, about this very question of how much, if ever, venture capital can borrow from private equity. Sum doesn’t think there is much to borrow. And the fundamental difference, he explained, lies in the PE approach before even considering investment opportunities. “These are two extremely different schools of thought. And have been so for a reason. They're looking for businesses at different times in their life, with different risk-and-reward balance,” he explains, referring to how venture capital seeks to support unproven business innovation whereas private equity focuses on “turn-around” investing in established but poorly performing companies. “If you look at a ten-company portfolio of a VC fund, you assume that one or two will hit it out of the park and return the fund a couple of times over. Another three, four or five will be mediocre, [returning] between two, three or four times the Investment. And a bunch will be between 0 and 1 and not return capital, or will return something that is insignificant. When you run the numbers, you assume that all of this together will bring you to the proverbial 3x,” says Sum. Sum does not believe that doing more due diligence, and instituting better corporate governance means VC is becoming more like private equity. LPs may be shaken by the recent losses, but Sum points out venture capital unlike private equity is long 10+2-year game, a point that I agree we easily forget. --------------------------------------------------------------- Read: [North is fixing primary healthcare with a hybrid care delivery model](=.TggCKQQNULC_z7YrtuhYgWpTvIUAPz1jL3mRCUgM4pU) --------------------------------------------------------------- But private equity works differently. A private equity investor wants to lose nothing and does not expect a massive 20x return. Instead, they work for consistent 2x or 3x returns across the entire portfolio. Doing this means private equity investors have to basically run the ships in all the companies they invest in. Unlike venture capital which is more un-involved operationally. It sounds like he is saying to quote a Bible parable, “between us and you there is a great gulf fixed: so that they which would pass from hence to you cannot; neither can they pass to us.” But this difference is fairly new. Forty years ago venture capitalists were much more involved in the companies they invested in. Unlike private equity firms, they took risks, but like private equity, they took more control of the businesses they invested in. So maybe we don’t need to find parts of private equity to copy. We only need to recover the parts of VC that were discarded as cheap money poured into the hands of fund managers post-2008. How much of what needs to be recovered though is a question to be answered. The early VC years were as ruthless as they were innovative and outperforming in returns. What I believe however is that VC is an investment model that is itself inbred with dynamism. In fact to state a loosely held radical opinion of mine, the 80/20 theory is due for so many caveats that we should not shy away from rethinking it. It is afterall why people were throwing money at every deck pitched by persons with suitable charisma etc. More importantly, the rise of private equity firms investing directly in startups points to a different and overlooked story: That private equity in the last two years has been behaving like venture capital firms. To conclude Just yesterday, it was the best of times. For investors and founders, it is not so today and it leaves us with several questions. Should venture capital become private equity? Should venture capital go back to how it was done 30 years ago? Or should we carry on with this new model, less the excesses of the last eight years? Are we misreading a reversion to old-school venture capital as private equalisation? And if so, how far back are we willing to go? Sequoia historically replaced the founders in 6 out of every ten companies it invested in, in the yesteryears of venture capital. Are we headed here? I’ll leave the answer to you and the guys in investment committees. Read: [Trade Lenda is building a digital bank for the underserved](=.vlFNyz-PAkZyV4AcWI-zQMD6Wk9wEeOAxLIjR7BbsdI) --------------------------------------------------------------- State of Tech in Africa Report - Q4 2022 [SOITA-ad] Technology in Africa is growing so fast it can be dizzying to follow everything by yourself. We took care of that for you. Download a free copy of the State of Tech in Africa report to have a bird’s eye view of what how technology firms (and investors) in Africa are finding their place in the world. [Read it now](=.9d90498sSmqvl7VcryOb0bEitu25Occj7hcHUY_GtwI) We'd love to hear from you Psst! Down here! Thanks for reading The Next Wave. Subscribe [here](=.L7Sl7Qu9zZXD_mkPvQb5zcsUjqiZ7yPL-1BjYpxxKjI) for free to get fresh perspectives on the progress of digital innovation in Africa every Sunday. Please share today’s edition with your network on WhatsApp, Telegram and other platforms, and feel free to send a reply to let us know if you enjoyed this essay [Subscribe to our TC Daily newsletter](=.knUM1KAfofgMVBs2B0TPYBeT62iJv4tFr5vw7WRKoMs) to receive all the technology and business stories you need each weekday at 7 AM (WAT). Follow TechCabal on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay engaged in our real-time conversations on tech and innovation in Africa. Abraham Augustine, Senior Writer, TechCabal. IF you liked this edition of Next Wave, please share with your network =.bd9hyvdTkhx1JcfDx--YS_0xVK_eddS3OHyw7GUOJmc =._JE_hSM5PAyFUwNTdxPPJJFUWq3_WOs9H_drP9qgqmc =.10HVhc4JIfMi1yoirgPZOZo6sJ4riH2bILxEC6ljEYk =.WVHvSeVCnePVg3GHuf16GfVfhAFTKab15woQfpyBjYU =.g7UQ_R-6TcYskS9Lf-K30WIflxZXY5baKXxF2J9fMbU # # # # # 18, Nnobi Street, Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria [View in Map](#) You received this email because you signed up on our website or made purchase from us.If you know longer wish to recieve these emails, please [unsubscribe](=.hVRwx_YV8Xviciw_nDYRRPPfpOgL4iAXj8SAXJv9RYI)

Marketing emails from bigcabal.com

View More
Sent On

08/06/2024

Sent On

07/06/2024

Sent On

07/06/2024

Sent On

06/06/2024

Sent On

05/06/2024

Sent On

05/06/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.