Venture Capital
Venture Capital
Venture Capital
Presented by:
Rajesh Kumar
MBA(Finance), ACS, AIII
Venture capital basics
Starting and growing a business always require capital.
There are a number of alternative methods to fund growth. These
include the owner or proprietor’s own capital, arranging debt finance,
or seeking an equity partner, as is the case with private equity and
venture capital.
Finance may be required for the start-up, development/expansion or
purchase of a company.
New companies or ventures that have a limited operating history and
hence may find it difficult to raise funds through an equity or debt
offering.
In such a scenario, VC investors play a pivot role in investing in
unfinanced areas to promote new ventures.
Venture capital is most attractive for new companies
with limited operating history that are too small to raise
capital in the public markets and have not reached the
point where they are able to secure a bank loan or
complete a debt offering.
What is Venture Capital
Venture capital is a means of equity financing for rapidly-growing private
companies.
Venture Capital firms invest funds on a professional basis, often focusing on a
limited sector of specialization (eg. IT,Bio Technology, infrastructure,
health/life sciences, clean technology, etc.).
The venture capital investment helps for the growth of innovative
entrepreneurships.
Venture capital is an investment in the form of equity, quasi-equity and
sometimes debt - straight or conditional, made in new or untried concepts,
promoted by a technically or professionally qualified entrepreneur.
Venture capital means risk capital.
What is VC
It is developed as a result of the need to provide non-
conventional, risky finance to new ventures based on innovative
entrepreneurship.
It refers to capital investment, both equity and debt, which
carries substantial risk and uncertainties.
The risk envisaged may be very high.
Venture capital typically comes from institutional investors and
high net worth individuals and is pooled together by dedicated
investment firms
Provider of seed money for start-ups, midstage firms on the
brink of success but needing additional capital, or successful
firms capable of expansion to a regional or nationwide platform.
VC also can include managerial and technical expertise.
VC- Definition
Venture capital is a type of private equity capital typically
provided for early-stage, high-potential, growth companies in
the interest of generating a return through an eventual
realization event such as an IPO or trade sale of the company.
A pool of risk capital, typically contributed by large investors,
from which allocations are made available to young, small
companies that have good growth prospects but are short of
funds.
It is developed as a result of the need to provide non-
conventional, risky finance to new ventures based on innovative
entrepreneurship.
Venture capital means risk capital.
VC- Definition
In the 1920's & 30's, the wealthy families and individual investors provided
the start up money for companies that had ability to become famous.
General Doriot, a professor at Harvard Business School, in 1946 set up the
American Research and Development Corporation (ARD), the first firm to
finance the commercial promotion of advanced technology developed in
the US Universities.
Among the early VC funds set up was the one by the Rockfeller Family
which started a special fund called VENROCK in 1950, to finance new
technology companies.
While in its early years VC may have been associated with high technology,
over the years the concept has undergone a change and as it stands today
it implies pooled investment in unlisted companies.
The Origin of Venture Capital- 20th century
During the 1960s and 1970s, venture capital firms focused their
investment activity primarily on starting and expanding
companies in electronic, medical or data-processing technology.
As a result, venture capital came to be almost synonymous with
technology finance.
The public successes of the venture capital industry in the 1970s
and early 1980s gave rise to a major proliferation of venture
capital investment firms.
90s witnessed world wide economic progress, wherein new
ventures started expanding with that the scope for VC funds.
Venture Capitalists generally:
Lack of liquidity
High risk
Equity participation
Participation in management
Structure of
Venture Capital Firms
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1. Seed Money:
Low level financing needed to prove a new idea.
2. Start-up:
Early stage firms that need funding for expenses
associated with marketing and product development.
3. First-Round:
Early sales and manufacturing funds.
4. Second-Round:
Working capital for early stage companies that are
selling product, but not yet turning a profit .
5. Third-Round:
Also called Mezzanine financing, this is expansion
money for a newly profitable company
6. Fourth-Round:
Also called bridge financing, it is intended to
finance the "going public" process
Risk in each stage
Market
expansion,
Third Stage 1-3 Medium acquisition &
product
development for
profit making
company
Fourth Stage 1-3 Low Facilitating public
issue
VC investment process
Deal origination
Screening
Due diligence
(Evaluation)
Deal structuring
Post investment
activity
Exit plan
THE FUNDING PROCESS
2.Introductory Conversation/Meeting
If your firm has the potential to fit with the VC’s investment
preferences, you will be contacted in order to discuss your business
in more depth.
3: Due Diligence: The due diligence phase will vary depending upon
the nature of your business proposal. The process may last from
three weeks to three months.
AS PER SEBI
AS PER INCOME TAX ACT,1961
Rules by SEBI:
VCF are regulated by the SEBI (Venture Capital
Fund) Regulations, 1996.
The following are the various provisions:
CHENNAI IT , Telecom
Bio-energy 5.79%
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Renewvables energies:an
opportunity to catch for the
venture capital
Three reasons of attractiveness :
1. Governments keep increasing deregulation of the
market energy;
2. Enviromentalists put the attention on the need of
the world of new sources of energies;
3. Increasing costs of the oils.
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The goals
• Venture capital energy companies invest on projects
long the value chain,focusing on two directions:
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In recent years
2006:venture capital invested $7.4 billion on
renewvables energies winth an increasing of 146%
respect the last year;
2008:in the last months of the year a drop in the
market occured
2009/2010:investments increase again supported by
the developing countries (China)and U.S.
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Problems of Venture Capital Financing
The various problems/ queries can be outlined as
follows :
1. Requirement of an experienced management team
.
2. Requirement of an above average rate of return on
investment .
3. Longer payback period .
4. Uncertainty regarding the success of the product
in the market .
Continue..
Nature of Business
Size of Business
Length of Production Cycle
Seasonal Variations
Working Capital Cycle
Recent Global Activities:
In 2012 global VC investment declined by 20%.
The amount raised via IPO declined globally by 27% from US$22.1b in
2011 to US$16.1b in 2012.
The investors that put money into their funds became less
aggressive during recession so it was harder for the VCs to
raise money.
Case Study
Druva Software, a Pune-based start-up that makes
proprietary backup software solutions for laptops, has
raised $5 million in Series A funding (funding that follows
seed funding) from Sequoia Capital India and Indian Angel
Network (IAN).
The money will be used to expand the three-year old
company’s marketing and sales footprint overseas,
including in Europe and the US. So far, it has relied largely
on Web-based channels to sell its products in those
markets.
80 per cent of data is duplicated,”. Druva, therefore,
developed a software that would allow companies to cut out
this duplication and enable laptops to work faster as well as
increase storage capacity.
Druva had earlier raised seed funding from the
Delhi-based Indian Angel Network and Hong
Kong-based Accord International.
Druva was developing a continuous data protection
product, which is the next level of back-up
technology, we decided to fund them,” says Rehan
Yar Khan, who represents IAN on the Druva board.
Some of the company’s earliest clients include
NASA and the US Marine Corps. Druva Phoenix,
Khan says, is now beginning to gain traction in the
market.
Future prospects of VC in India
VC can help in the rehabilitation of sick units.
VC can assist small ancillary units to upgrade their
technologies
VCFs can play a significant role in developing
countries in the service sector including tourism,
publishing, health care etc.
They can provide financial assistance to people
coming out of universities, technical institutes, etc
thus promoting entrepreneurial spirits