Tag: Startups

  • What Returns Can Investors Expect In A Private World?

    What Returns Can Investors Expect In A Private World?

    Well, I can’t promise you a future with a beachfront property in “Gaza Lago”. In fact, in the world of investing there are no guaranteed returns. As promised in our recent Private Portfolio Thoughts newsletter, I wanted to address expectations as to what long-run returns a private investor should be looking for in a portfolio of private assets.  First, let’s take a look at ‘industry standard’ expectations based on global historic data compiled by research house, Pitchbook. Of course, these are just averages and no doubt are ‘skewed’ by supra-normal returns for a small number of successful funds in each asset class. However, the table below gives an approximate guide to expectations over various time horizons and types of investment.

     

    The Spark focus is probably towards the top of this table summarising 5-year and 10-year returns for private equity (PE) and early-stage investing through venture capital (VC). However, if we strip out debt and real asset products the double-digit (%) performance picture is pretty similar across the board for private assets. The annual rates of return (IRR) implied by the performance of these private assets (in aggregate) are 13.4% over 5-years and 12.5% over 10-years.

    Let’s be more conservative and suggest that portfolios of private assets after 10 years SHOULD have grown in value at a rate of 12%. In real terms (and compounding those rates of return) that equates to an initial investment of €10,000 growing to €31,000 over 10 years. For context, a fund with publicly listed equities would be expected (by financial planners) to generate 7% returns per annum and thus turn €10,000 into €19,600. Of course, the extra return earned by the private asset portfolios is the compensation required by investors for the higher risk exposure(reduced liquidity, business failure) compared to the shares of large established businesses trading every day. These return numbers (based on history) can be described as “hurdle” rates which investors are expecting to match or beat in order to justify putting their capital at risk over long periods of time. So, let’s apply some hurdles to our world of very young companies (VC) and small businesses (private equity).

    We know that the industry standard in more mature private capital investment strategies is looking to turn €10,000 into something north of €30,000 over 10 years. We might describe this as an expectation to generate 3x your initial investment amount. Arguably, for higher risk investments in our earlier-stage world, investors could expect/demand an even higher return for their portfolios. If investors wanted 4x returns or €40,000 after 10 years that equates to a 15% annual return which is what private equity strategies have achieved(see table). So, that expectation is not unreasonable. But…. how realistic is it in a high risk portfolio of mainly early-stage business failure? We should touch on the key ‘push backs’ we get from investors who are wary of investing in start-up businesses or smaller private equity deals. The following are the most common perceived wisdoms….

     

    “80-90% of start-ups fail”

    “ Exits are more difficult as IPO markets for smaller companies have struggled”

    “I can just buy publicly listed equities and earn similar returns”

     

    There is an element of historic truth to all these statements but I’m going to use the most dangerous words in the investing lexicon by stating “this time it’s different”. First, the history of start-up failure should take into account the characteristics of older vintages of businesses. Let’s think about old economy businesses investing heavily in premises, equipment, overseas expansion facilities, logistics etc. These are, in most cases, “sunk costs” in capital-heavy businesses. Inevitably, if the business gets into trouble these ‘assets’ are not just worthless but can have an actual negative value due to ongoing liabilities/leases, maintenance costs, security, insurance etc. Now, think about many of today’s “asset light” businesses leveraging digital infrastructure and building value through the experience of the founders/team, the data gathered by the business and the development of relationships with clients and partners.

    These businesses don’t have the same level of sunk costs/liabilities (as old economy businesses) which can swamp the value of the operational “franchise”. Instead, the value within a business which might not be meeting growth targets can be recognised by a third party and lead to another form of exit which doesn’t involve liquidation. In the Spark portfolio we have seen a number of businesses acquired by third parties in the same sector in exchange for shares in the acquiring company. These shares clearly have a value and also change the traditional calculations around start-up failure.

    In the world of debt/credit one of the key financial terms/metrics is historic “recovery value”. In main street terms, this is the typical expected percentage of the debt which can be recovered when a business fails in a particular sector. You will see such sector recovery data displayed as a percentage of the debt ie 20 cents, 30 cents in the dollar. So, in the world of start-ups there is normally no debt and the equity in the business is a complete ZERO in the case of struggle or failure. But, now that’s not quite the case. If an acquiring business is offering a share exchange then the “recovery value” could by 20-50% of the original investment. And, the reason for ‘value’ being found in the business is the experience of the acquired team, the database and client relationships. This is happening on a far bigger scale elsewhere.

    Ever heard of the term ‘acqui-hiring”? This refers to a situation in which a company acquires another company primarily for its talented team or employees, rather than its products, technology, or other assets. In an acqui-hire, the acquiring company may not be interested in continuing the acquired company’s business or product, but rather wants to bring the talent into its own organization. Now, here’s another bit of jargon monoxide…. ever heard of CVC? Well, you know what venture capital (VC) does but there’s a subset of the VC ecosystem called Corporate Venture Capital(CVC). This form of VC funding is in reality larger corporations investing in smaller businesses whose franchises/technology could ultimately be relevant and value-creating for the parent company.

    So, you might think Sequoia, Index Ventures, Tiger Global and Andreessen Horowitz are the kings of VC investing. Now, think again. Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Nvidia are hugely active in the VC funding space. As an illustration, Nvidia deployed $1 billion in 50 VC funding rounds in 2024 alone. Furthermore, Google has acquired a whopping 222 start-ups over the years, and in 2023 the “Magnificent 7” tech stocks participated in 208 VC deals. So, the IPO market might not be as start-up friendly as in the past but Big Tech certainly is stepping up to the plate as a new and highly active exit event option.

    Of course, there will always be those investors who believe they can earn approximately similar returns to private asset strategies by choosing a selection of publicly listed companies. Yep, the likes of Domino’s Pizza, Paddy Power, Apple and Nvidia tick those boxes but there’s also an assumption investors will avoid the temptation of selling while on the multi-decade rocket ride. However, the more significant point is about business failure. Think it’s only start-ups?  Sixty years ago the average life-span of a company in the S&P 500 was over 50 years. Today, it’s less than 15 years! By 2027, almost 75% of companies who were quoted in the S&P 500 in 2016 will have disappeared (Source: McKinsey). Not for the first time, I’d suggest it’s worth a read of the excellent The Future is Faster Than You Think to grasp how fast business and technology leadership is changing.

    We can’t forecast the future. However, we should recognise that the world of start-ups today has changed dramatically. As a final illustration, start-up funding was traditionally populated by a majority of consumer-focused businesses – think retail, textiles, manufacturing, food, fashion etc.  The term “B2C” would be used to describe these business-to-consumer companies. Well, that’s changed too. Certainly, for Spark. A whopping 70% of funding deals completed by Spark have been business-to-business (B2B) opportunities. It should also be noted that our vetting process turns away approximately nine in every ten opportunities. Arguably, we are selecting the top decile of quality in the opportunity universe. No doubt we will get it wrong along the way, but this is still a robust risk starting point. And, it’s not the only starting point…

    The purpose of this article is to set the scene for a follow-up piece on how these structural shifts can impact the average private portfolio and future expectations using sample portfolios and outcomes. But always remember…. if I could truly forecast the future, “Gaza Lago” might personally have an entirely different meaning and location.

  • Still Some Golden Theme Tickets Left…

    Still Some Golden Theme Tickets Left…

    I’m going to save you some time. Forget about calendar-driven commentariat reviews and 2025 forecasts for investment or geopolitical risk. Sorry to be the “Grinch of Guru”, but calendars and structural investment themes have zero correlation. Opinion is cheap and even the betting markets are displaying their patchy predictive powers in recent weeks. Yip, just a 6% chance of the Ba’athist beast, President Assad, being toppled in Syria. About as much chance as a Chinese spy in Buckingham Palace… oh wait. Sadly, Prince Andrew is a multi-year clown car journey in particularly poor company but there’s a lesson there too. Almost all significant investment themes – risks and opportunities – are multi-year stories whose plots twist and turn but keep a very clear direction of travel. So, let’s take a look at some of the major themes we have previously visited and a few more developing ones; all with interesting plot twists.

    Europe Crisis or Opportunity: Nothing good in the headlines…..German government falls, UK in second month of GDP contraction, France on its 4th premiership in a year. But, but here’s a few twists on the negatives. The lists of where Europe lags the US is a long one, from labour productivity, to AI and innovation, to stock market performance. And yet, if you strip out the performance of AI hardware star, Nvidia, from the S&P 500 then Europe’s stock market (MSCI EMU) has actually earned better returns for investors than the US benchmark since the most recent bull market started in October 2022. That suggests there are lots of European companies doing very well despite ‘core’ European economies struggling. Check out also in recent days Spotify becoming only the second European tech company since SAP to crack the $100 billion market cap mark. The headlines do not lie but the narrative on Europe is more nuanced than you think.

    Healthcare: Another structural theme from previous years’ writings, healthcare has actually been a winning area for Europe thanks to the miracle weight-loss drugs, Ozempic and Wegovy. Their Danish owner, Novo Nordisk, became Europe’s most valuable company in 2024. However, we might be about to enter an accelerated era of therapy/drug discovery for all types of medical illness. The clue is in the Nobel Prizes awarded in both Physics and Chemistry in 2024 to pioneers of AI usage in research. Now, for those already struggling with how AI large language models (LLM) work and the warp-speed calculations of the almost-monthly iterations of these technologies, get ready for the ultimate head wrecker. Google has just developed a quantum computing chip, “Willow”, which performed a computation in less than 5 minutes that would have taken today’s fastest computers 10 septillion years to complete. Yeah, that’s 25 zeros which exceeds known timescales in physics and vastly exceeds the age of the universe. Think about that. This chip created by quantum physics “used” time which theoretically can’t exist unless…… there are other parallel universes. Google Quantum AI founder, Hartman Neven, calmly wrote that the stunning performance of this chip indicates that “we live in a multiverse”.  Maybe Willy Wonka wasn’t so wrong to say “Come with me and you’ll be, In a world of pure imagination”.

    Artificial Intelligence (AI): Arguably, the world of AI has moved in a completely different direction. The shift of investment capital away from bits (software) to atoms (hardware) has been spectacular. Another company nobody ever heard of until recently, Broadcom, has become the latest technology hardware company to join the trillion dollar market capitalisation club. The US chip maker is now one of FOUR tech hardware companies in the list of the 10 most valuable companies on the planet. Clearly, investors see AI infrastructure as the early ‘win’ in the AI arms race. However, do NOT ignore software. Interestingly, the Clouded Judgment software newsletter has flagged a 20% expansion in median software valuation multiples since mid-November (from 5.6x to 6.7x revenues). Also, Nvidia has dropped in value by 11% in recent weeks. Yes, rotation from hardware to software and back again will be a feature of the multi-year AI revolution but the venture capital data from CB Insights confirms the direction of AI travel. Global venture capital (VC) deals in AI jumped 24% in Q3 to the highest levels seen since the Q1 2022 peak. In fact, one in every three dollars of VC investments went to AI start-ups.

    Banking and Fintechs: Closer to home, Revolut has just confirmed it has more than 3 million customers in Ireland. A staggering 75% of all Ireland-based adults now use the UK fintech platform for banking and payments. Meanwhile, the US bank sector has rocketed 30% higher this year, Europe is seeing Italian banking M&A deals and the largest asset manager in the world, Blackrock, has embarked on a private asset acquisition frenzy. We have written before that the future is private and I’m wondering are big corporates thinking the same? Sticking with the fintech sector, it was striking in the past week to see the shipping/logistics giant AP Moller lead an €80m investment round for UK fintech, Zopa Bank. In the same week, we note another globally significant name, Walmart, was the lead investor in a $300m round for fintech platform, One. Hmmm….Private banking/fintech, private opportunity.

    Climate & Electrical Vehicles (EV): Apparently, 11 out of 16 EV battery manufacturing projects in Europe have been canned or delayed. Of course, the $15 billion investment in Northvolt was the highest profile casualty in 2024 but there will be other twists and turns in the electrification journey. And, possibly a lesson in long-term planning. China 20 years ago had almost zero car production capacity. Now, it is on track to manufacturing 30 million cars a year and has surpassed Japan as the biggest exporter in the world with 5.17m units sent overseas. In fact, Chinese built EVs now account for 76% of the global EV market. So, if one were to be thinking 20 years ahead again what is most likely to drive investment returns in the transport world? Well, how about not driving. More specifically, self-driving. So, I’m quietly stunned that Google’s Waymo self-driving cars are clocking up 175,000 rides per week compared to 50,000 rides 6 months ago. That’s actually more than 1 million miles of autonomous transport delivered with an almost flawless safety record. I sense 2025 could see self-driving transport go mainstream and, as I write, Waymo have announced they are about to trial robo-taxis in their first non-US city, Tokyo, next year.

    The list of themes above is not exhaustive but they are structural themes measured in decades rather than calendar years. These are the most likely golden tickets to deliver standout returns like Nvidia’s 27,000 % return over the last 10 years. But, as always, we should keep an eye out for reversals of long standing narratives too. Argentina might be the prompt for contrarian thought while on track to deliver the best stock market returns of 2024. Who knew! So here’s two thoughts to chew over for the festive season: i) A European refugee reversal as Syrian and Ukrainian citizens potentially return home in 2025 and ii) A renewed embrace of nuclear power/investment to drive the electrification of the global economy.

    “Oh you should never, never doubt what nobody is sure about”         –   Willy Wonka

     

  • Torn In The USA: A European View

    Torn In The USA: A European View

    I know, I know. Who wants views, just get this bloody vote over with. Well, we hope the bloody bit doesn’t come true but, if you want Hitler’s generals and your chief cheerleader is a just-revealed Putin (pay)pal, then you never know. Anyway, forget the politics. Let’s pause and reflect where the US economy is today, not where it will be in 11 days. Also, note that financial markets, for the first time in 2024, through emerging market equities and inflation-measuring instruments (bonds, gold) are beginning to think about a different USA to come. However, in this article I’d like to highlight ten things which the average European would envy about our US ally today.

     

    1. The US stock market now accounts for 50% of the global total, but is home to less than 5% of the world’s population.

     

    1. The IMF this week (Financial Times) has provided some explanation for this dominance by highlighting stagnant European productivity growth since 2005. In the same two decade period US productivity has rocketed by 40%.

     

    1. Technology you say. You’d be right. Just 5 US technology companies – Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta/Facebook – have a collective market value of $12.2 trillion which is more than the value of any other stock market in the world. Indeed, the new AI chip star, Nvidia, is worth more than the entire stock markets of five of the G7 countries.

     

    1. The old stuff is going well too. US domestic oil production hit 13.4 million barrels a day in August. That’s the highest production number for ANY country(even OPEC) in history. The US is a NET exporter of oil while Europe watches its eastern gas pipelines anxiously. But, you won’t hear that on Fox News. Drill baby, drill…just not the facts.

     

    1. Not surprisingly, US banks with the biggest corporate customers in the world are doing quite well. US banking giant, JP Morgan, has a market value of $540 billion which exceeds the combined value of Europe’s top 10 banks.

     

    1. Maybe Europe will disrupt US economic hegemony and bounce back with AI? Ehhhh…that’s not looking like a great bet right now. The sheer cost of talent and large-language-models (LLM) used to train and build AI applications are turning the AI race into Big Tech 2.0. Recent newsflow would suggest it’s only Microsoft/OpenAI, Amazon, Meta and Google who have the deep pockets to win the race. And, Asia will be watching anxiously too. The Asian dominance of hardware/semiconductor chip production is in “transition” as Taiwan’s TSMC just told the markets that the production yields in its new Arizona plant are 4% higher than in its home base Taiwan.

     

    1. Speaking of home bases…US home owners are sitting on $32 trillion of value attached to their home equity. That’s a quadrupling of property wealth from the $8 trillion low recorded as recently as 2012. How did that happen?

     

    1. Jobs, and lots of them. The US economy is at full employment, the highest seen in 100 years. Oh, and average hourly earnings are up 26% since 2020. In fact, US real (adjusted for inflation) wage growth is up 26% since 2000. More companies too…

     

    1. Back in 2015, 2.8 million new companies were formed in that year. The number in 2023 was 5.5 million. That’s a near doubling of start-up activity in less than 10 years. And…. money doesn’t just talk.

     

    1. Risk earns rewards. High risk venture capital (VC) is the oxygen of innovation and explains much of the US tech dominance. The US capital markets are the source of 50% of ALL venture capital funding globally. Asia is 40%. And Europe…… ahem…… 5%.

     

    That’s enough. But, I could mention military dominance too as Russia impales itself on imperial delusion in Ukraine and is now resorting to throwing North Korean troops into meat-grinder combat action on its own soil in Kursk. Of course, the US is not in a perfect place, leaving aside its toxic partisan politics. Its health and hate crises seem to be impossible to address by looking overseas for solutions or perspective. Indeed, the sheer presence of 350 million guns in the most prosperous land on the planet are a startling reflection of fear in the midst of so much opportunity. We can only watch over the next few days, as US citizens cast their votes. The list of ‘wins’ above looks like a fabulous starting point. The polls suggest voters are not so sure.

    As Europeans, we can attest to similar ‘win’ lists for Germany and the UK ten years ago. Not so today, and their voters painfully know they played their part in believing not-so-great-again political calculations in new energy and trade policies. Tick tock…..

     

     

  • More Blue Sky Than Blue Monday

    More Blue Sky Than Blue Monday

    Apparently, the Monday of this week is the worst every year for negative thought. Furthermore, the new UK Foreign Secretary, Lord Cameron, fresh from launching war in the Red Sea, told us in a weekend TV interview that “the lights are absolutely flashing red” on the global risk dashboard. Excellent. Well, that’s settled then – I mean Lord “Call Me Dave” gets all the big calls right doesn’t he? Ok, let’s not invite the rest of the world to turn the air blue. In fact, let’s do what should have been done in 2016 and pay attention to what’s really happening in the world right now. Not surprisingly for this writer, January is already confirming themes established and developing from earlier years and we are more than happy to keep screaming about them until we are blue. So, here we go with a little whistle-stop tour of the real world….

    We truly believe the ‘convergence’ of various technologies is about to turbo-charge the acceleration of change in the global economy. An existential crisis also helps focus minds and….. money. The climate change crisis has prompted the greatest capital shift in history as $6 trillion of annual spending on cleantech is forecast every year until 2050 (Source: McKinsey). Indeed, one of the key investment destinations in moving away from fossil fuels has been electric vehicles(EVs), and the batteries used to store energy and power these vehicles. Chemistry advances have been key in driving costs down and capacity up where lithium-ion type batteries are the predominant storage technology. However, artificial intelligence(AI), probably the hottest investment theme outside cleantech right now, has just been used in conjunction with supercomputing to discover a brand new material which could reduce lithium usage by up to 70%.

    Yep, Microsoft and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) research teams whittled down 32 million potential material combinations to 18 promising molecular structures within a week. Incredibly, the whole discovery project took 9 months in a screening process that would typically have taken more than 20 years using traditional lab research methods. The new AI-derived material, simply called N2116, should prompt thought as to what’s possible in the world of medicine, agriculture, transport and construction,  but also counter an unhealthy commentariat focus on AI ‘safetyism”. The social and economic basics of health, shelter, mobility and food are in dire need of blue sky thinking but might just have found a genuine innovation accelerator. Microsoft themselves have told the BBC that one of the company’s missions was “to compress 250 years of scientific discovery into the next 25.” Thankfully, this was not the only positive solution speed surprise of recent weeks.

    The IEA has confirmed that renewable energy capacity increased globally by 50% in 2023 alone(!). That’s the biggest growth seen in more than two decades. At that pace, it is conceivable renewable energy could be 50% of electricity generation by 2030 and, brace yourselves… would actually meet the renewables ‘tripling’ target agreed at Cop 28. Germany – not getting great economic press in recent times – is already at the 50% renewable electricity production level with CO2 emissions currently at a 70-year low. Furthermore, coal usage at a 60-year low in Germany makes for clearer skies but the gloomy headlines could have obscured another Teutonic trophy win.  The EU has given the go-ahead for Germany to provide €902 million of state aid to battery producer, Northvolt, for the construction of a gigafactory producing EV batteries. Without that aid, Northvolt would have probably moved the project to the US. Instead, the €2.5 billion project at Heide will be the first to avail of the new ‘matching aid’ exception allowed by the EU to support more flexible/higher amounts of state aid to prevent an investment exodus to the US.  Expect more good European news on this front as the region is forecast to build a further 250 battery factories by 2033 (Source: Buck Consultants). These are real actions and projects (not headlines) but companies are also showing confidence with more traditional strategic moves.

    We perennially write “watch what they do, not what they say” and the big “tell” is often M&A activity. Given acquiring other companies results in wealth destruction almost 50% of the time, we tend to see a flurry of M&A activity as a positive illustration of executive confidence and found the headlines of recent weeks interesting.  You might think the announced $14 billion purchase of Juniper Networks by HP was just another example of the technology sector enjoying the benefits(and valuation multiples) of a stellar 2023 but back in the ‘old economy’ things are stirring too. And, if M&A was tricky enough why not try to acquire a national icon, as a foreign company? Cue the Japanese execs at Nippon Steel have decided to swoop for US Steel in another $14 billion deal. Once the most valuable company in the world, US Steel could become a political football but both boards have agreed the deal and are acutely aware that the most recent offer from domestic rival, Cleveland Cliffs, was just over $7 billion. You don’t need the finance gurus to figure that one out. Anyway, they are busy too. The world’s biggest asset manager, BlackRock, has announced the $12.5 billion purchase of Global Infrastructure Partners (owner of Gatwick Airport and Melbourne Port). Clearly, the $10 trillion giant sees a future for the old stuff.  As for the new stuff…

    The SEC in the US has just approved funds (ETFs) which invest in cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin). This is massive for the crypto and blockchain ecosystem. In simple terms, this approval by the SEC means funds invested in Bitcoin are now regulated and can be considered an asset class in their own right. Nine funds (ETFs) have been approved to trade on New York regulated exchanges, and in the first two days of trading attracted $1.5 of investor inflows. BlackRock’s fund led the way with $500m followed by Fidelity’s fund bringing in $422m. For me, cryptocurrencies are a very good indicator of risk appetite, or confidence. So, if Bitcoin is trading close to $40,000, this feels like the world is not about to fall apart. Other new stuff is doing well too.

    We’ve already touched on AI’s benefits to humanity but, if you’re an investor, the AI posterchild is still Nvidia. While the broader equity markets have spluttered in January, Nvidia continues to march to new record highs. Its market value is now in the region of $1.4 trillion. For context, if Nvidia’s share price increases by another 15% its valuation will match that of Amazon. Then consider Microsoft, another AI play, which overtook Apple this week as the most valuable company in the world. You might think all the AI excitement is in the big tech names but CB Insights has published data showing AI start-ups benefitting from  significant valuation premia when raising capital. Median valuations for early stage/seed fundings were 21% higher, larger Series A fundings saw a 39% premium and Series B funding rounds clipped an extra 59% from investors compared to non-AI companies. Get ready for more AI references in investment ‘story telling’, but also watch out for the continuing battle for authentic stories and content needing no AI.

    Over the weekend, the exclusive rights to the NFL game between the Miami Dolphins and the Kansas City Chiefs were sold to NBC’s streaming service, Peacock, for $110 million, or $1.8 million per minute of game time. According to the superb sports finance newsletter, Huddle Up, this is all about Peacock/NBC being given a foothold by the NFL as streaming overtakes cable consumption over the next 5 years.  That means Apple, Amazon and Netflix will be a big part of media rights negotiations in many sports in the coming years. Think Hulu and Wrexham, then marvel at the Rightmove data showing Wrexham as the busiest property rental market in the UK in 2023. That certainly wasn’t forecast on those Brexit red buses in 2016.

    Of course, a market whistle-stop tour would not be complete without a check on the ‘Big Daddy’ driver of all asset classes; the cost of money. Here too, the news was not blue. The cost of two year money in the US in the past week (measured by the yields on traded 2 year US Treasuries) was back to levels not seen since May 2023. In fact, the world’s most profitable bank, JP Morgan, didn’t just announce record profits last week but also told investors they believe the Fed will cut interest rates SIX times in 2024. We shall see, but it is clear that capital is “climbing a wall of worry” in lots of interesting parts of the global economy. That does not mean we can ignore the concerns of some serious and credible analysts. The world’s risk experts continue to watch Russia vs Ukraine, Israel vs Hamas and China vs Taiwan. More than enough volatility, and enough for Ian Bremmer, CEO of the Eurasia Group consultancy, to describe this year as…

    “Politically it’s the Voldemort of years. The annus horribilis…. and then there’s the biggest challenge in 2024… The United States versus itself”.

    Again, voting like sport doesn’t need AI. Who would have thought that US democracy would be the greatest geopolitical risk of 2024? Simply stunning. Yet, I am hopeful that younger voters, business leaders, investment capital and credible domestic influencers will begin to spell out the true potential cost of burning the US Constitution in front of the whole world. Just imagine fighting the “Red” threat of totalitarian Communism for decades and then discovering you have your very own Red totalitarian party at home? Now that must make more than a few voters go blue……

  • What’s The Score For ’24?

    What’s The Score For ’24?

    It’s that time of year again to pause, reflect and hope to do better in future. Unless, of course, you’re the Conservative Party in the UK or the Republican Party in the US and ‘the race-to-most-nasty’ is the leadership badge of shame soon to be re-spelt with a ‘Z’. Back in the do-better world, a review process can help shape future efforts. So, let’s do a quick check on our four multi-year investment themes we identified almost a year ago in “Four Pictures To Develop This Year”.  First, we will remind ourselves of what was written, and then score/review how things developed for AI, Housing, Corporate Credit and Cleantech/Batteries. We kick off with the biggie….. Artificial Intelligence (AI):

    “The excellent database resource, Our World in Data, shows annual corporate investment in AI doubling from circa $80 billion in 2019 to over $160 billion by mid 2021. More specifically, the explosion of interest in generative AI (ChatGPT, DALL-E etc) has seen VC investment increase by 425% to $2.1 billion since 2020”

    Review: Well, at the half-way stage of this year, 18% of global venture(VC) funding went to AI, clocking a total of $25 billion(Source: Crunchbase). Furthermore, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq index gaining almost 50% this year, Nvidia reaching a trillion dollar market cap and OpenAI hitting an $85 billion private market valuation, it is not hard to identify AI as the single biggest positive driver of investment markets this year. Of course, the trajectory of the cost of money (interest rates) also helps with the confidence bit, but we have written before that November 17 has more than one revolutionary connotation. As of this year, the night of November 17th will be remembered for the $200 billion swing in value between Google and Microsoft in a matter of hours, and entirely driven by the relative success or failure of their respective cloud computing divisions. The AI revolution is in full swing and will continue into 2024

    While the cloud has become the housing proxy for AI, what about our own housing markets? A year ago we were concerned:

    “Of course, rising interest rates don’t just impact companies. The biggest item on an individual’s balance sheet is likely to be a house and as interest rates rise, so do mortgage rates. The push/pull effect of higher interest/mortgage rates can reduce the price of the assets being purchased, in this case houses rather than growth companies…… indicates a more difficult 2023 for a number of major housing markets.”

    Review: Arguably, this theme did not play out in a significant way, unless you were Chinese. Bluntly speaking, the doomsday predictions of housing crashes in the US, Australia, Canada and the UK just did not materialise. However, house prices are somewhat softer in many markets. The St Louis Fed has said median house prices in the US are off 10%. Even the UK with its dysfunctional government, and one Prime Minister(Liz Truss) having a good go at crashing the property market all by herself, has seen price slippage of just 1% (Source: Halifax). The key flaw in the doomster arguments was that most people kept their jobs. Major economies in a state of full employment was not expected as the “vibecession” never turned into a recession. And, if recession is avoided then there’s another asset class which has dodged a bullet; corporate debt/credit. Here’s what we feared….

    “In real world terms, the knock–on effect of tighter funding conditions will begin to reveal themselves in 2023 as companies with challenged balance sheets/indebtedness – aka ‘zombies’ – move into distressed territory.”

    Review: As a proxy for corporate stress you’d expect high yield bond (lower quality debt) spreads to have risen through the year. But no. They’re actually at their lowest since April 2002. However, we’ve had a few big bankruptcies through the year – Silicon Valley Bank, WeWork, Diebold Nixdorf, Rite Aid, Van Moof, and even Birmingham City Council. By June UK bankruptcies were up 40% on the year before. According to S&P Global, in the first 10 months of this year 561 companies sought bankruptcy protection in the US. That’s more than any year since 2010, except for the Covid-19 hit in 2020. So, I’d give us a pass mark on this but feel there’s another year of stress ahead. In particular, commercial real estate as an asset class is going to witness some very painful write-downs and outright collapses. Check out the recent travails of Austrian billionaire, Rene Benko, and his $25 billion property empire, Signa, for a very current case study.  However, not all building is in trouble….

    “In some ways, the best proxy for the planet’s race towards reducing fossil fuel dependence is the enormous investment currently being ploughed into production facilities for batteries to power a generational shift to electric vehicles(EV). China in 2020 accounted for 75% of global battery production capacity but that’s going to change. Europe intends to up capacity 5-fold by 2030 and the US isn’t just home-shoring semiconductor manufacturing.”

    Review: Like AI, I think this gets us pretty good marks. The cleantech and energy storage(battery) revolution is in full flow. McKinsey reckon $6.5 trillion will be spent every year on capital expenditure/building facilities which, in the words of the latest Cop-out 28 text, will “transition away from fossil fuels”. We did say catch up was required by Europe and the US in battery manufacture, but arguably the US has accelerated faster. Thanks to ‘Bidenomics’ and the IRA Act the US is seeing capital investment in manufacturing reach levels not seen in four decades. According to MIT, cleantech investments in the 12 months to July 2023 hit $213 billion, and was mostly allocated to EV battery manufacturing, renewable energy and green hydrogen infrastructure. No wonder the old-economy barometer, the Dow Jones Index, just hit an all-time-high level of 37,000 points. More amusingly, Trump whisperer, Maria Bartiromo, on Fox Business was forced to say “the economy is doing much better than most people understand.”  Wonder how that misunderstanding developed, Maria?

    So, there’s a temptation to stick with the same four themes for 2024, but in the spirit of Christmas we’d like to give a bit more. The bonus good news is that Christmas might also be easier on the waistline in the coming years. Yes, AI has stolen many of the headlines this year but there’s a 100 year old company in Europe breaking records too. Denmark’s Novo Nordisk is now the most valuable company in Europe with a $437 billion market capitalisation thanks to its insulin product, turned weight-loss miracle drug, Wegovy. This semaglutide-based drug is a game-changer for up to 750 million people living with obesity. However, there might be even bigger break-through treatments to come. And, it’s all about BIOLOGY.

    We are entering the world of gene editing spearheaded by CRISPR technology. Get used to that term. CRISPR stands for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats. It is a component of bacterial immune systems that can cut DNA, and has been repurposed as a gene editing tool. Only this week we were reading that the FDA has approved two ground-breaking cell-based gene therapies, Casgevy and a new one, Lyfgenia, for treating sickle cell disease (SCD) in patients aged 12 and older. Notably, Casgevy is the first FDA-approved therapy utilizing CRISPR.

    Now, think about healthcare spend being almost 11% of global GDP, or $11-12 trillion. The prospect of biology rather than pharmacology being used to eliminate various life-changing diseases is mind-blowing. Furthermore, as the first attempts to regulate AI emerge let’s open our minds up to the probability that these massive new computing powers can save decades of research time. So, as a final thought, perhaps 2024 will deliver a break-through global healthcare solution through the combination of AI and biology. Just imagine, our health becoming your wealth…. I definitely think that would score well.

  • Take Your Pension Or Portfolio To Another Level

    Take Your Pension Or Portfolio To Another Level

    Fizzle sticks! There goes another billion dollar ‘unicorn’ I didn’t back. Sound familiar? This week’s news that Ireland’s Cubic Telecom has entered the ‘unicorn’ club thanks to a €473 million investment from Japan’s Softbank should focus financial planning minds. In particular, we should focus on two things very familiar to readers of these pages. Firstly, speed. The business world is moving faster and faster. Secondly, technologies are rapidly merging and compounding value.

    Just over a year ago, Cubic Telecom was reporting annual sales(Sept 2022) of circa €30 million with its connectivity software installed in 10 million vehicles. Yep, €30 million not €300 million. So, what prompted Softbank to enter into discussions for a 51% stake purchase on a valuation multiple of 31x the previous year’s revenues? One could hazard a guess that speed of growth was one consideration, given installations of its software have ramped up to 450,000 vehicles per month and are expected to go ‘exponential’. Also, one suspects the compounding of a number of technologies is beginning to drive traction. Cubic is at the fortunate intersection of the Internet of Things(IoT), 5G connectivity, electric/battery powered vehicles (EVs), cloud computing and Artificial Intelligence(AI). We need to start thinking about multiple technologies compounding at speed rather than focusing on one technology advance, and it’s not just Ireland illustrating these two themes.

    All the gloomy headlines this year have put us all in a strange place. And, awkwardly so for financial advisors who possibly went into ‘bunker’ mode. I have been asked to look at 3 different pensions in the last week where returns to date were hovering at just over 3%. That’s actually less than you’d earn on risk-free US Treasuries currently. However, the killer data point is that the tech-heavy index, the Nasdaq 100, is up 48% year-to-date. Oh, and despite all those war headlines and oil worries from Russia/Ukraine and the Middle-East, the energy sector is DOWN year-to-date. Even Germany which is staggering into recession boasts a stock-market (DAX) hitting all-time highs and returning 18% gains this year. Note, the DAX is definitely NOT filled with tech names. However, the Nasdaq is telling us lots of technology from energy storage(Tesla) to cloud(Microsoft) to AI(Google) are emerging at the same time. Just yesterday, Google showed us a new AI bot, Gemini, and its market value jumped by $85 billion over the day. That’s the equivalent of Citibank’s market capitalization after 211 years in existence. Just one day. It feels like wealth creation cycles are shrinking.

    Latest reports suggest the AI team at French start-up, Mistral, are raising funds again. Recall that this crew of AI gurus raised over $100 million 6 months ago with no product, no business or revenues. Just a PowerPoint presentation deck. Now the team have a product (large language model(LLM) for Generative AI) and want to raise more than $300 million. The current valuation level for Mistral is ….. reported to be over $2 billion. Six months. However, before we go all dollars dreamy, note that the hard yards and years are still the norm. For example, Cubic Telecom started up back in 2005. At a higher level, consider it took Microsoft 44 years to hit the trillion dollar market value mark, Apple 42 years, Amazon 24 years and Google 21 years. Keep those tech and time thoughts and let’s move to the other end of the business life spectrum.

    We have already referenced pensions, but for many investors these are vehicles for a variety of funds investing in a mix of blue chip publicly listed company shares and their debt(bonds), government bonds, possibly some real estate and a bit of cash. Given the fast-moving tech world we live in, it is increasingly apparent that investors’ pensions or savings portfolios should allocate a small portion of monies(5-10%) to early-stage companies. Pensions are not the ideal vehicle(for the majority of people) for these investments, but the good news is that the government provides incentives with a similarly attractive taxation impact.

    For years, starting with BES schemes and then evolving into the current EIIS funding initiatives, government has encouraged private investor capital to support employment and growth for early-stage companies by offering tax rebates against income generated in the year of investment(s). That rate of rebate has been a standard 40% but is due to change. More on that later but first, let’s briefly explain the mechanics of EIIS.

    If a company is eligible for EIIS investment it will typically be introduced to private investors in three ways. Note, not all companies qualify for EIIS treatment eg. financial trading businesses are not eligible. Companies which do qualify, offer shares through the following:

     

    • Direct Investment: The investee company offers its shares directly to investors. These direct investment opportunities are typically offered to small groups of investors known to the company’s founders or its financial advisors, and not made public.

     

    • EIIS Funds: These funds are managed by financial intermediaries/brokers and request lump sums up front from private investors. The capital raised is then deployed across EIIS investment opportunities. The up-front sums can be significant(> €10,000) and the managers will charge annual fees.

     

    • CrowdFunding Platforms: A platform like Spark (or Seedrs or Crowdcube in UK) will give thousands of signed-up investors access to 12-15 fundraising campaigns by EIIS qualifying companies each year. The business model of these platforms is different to a fund. The investors do not pay any up-front lump sums or fees. Investors can invest as little as €250 in each EIIS investment with NO commissions, and NO management fees. Instead, Spark and other platforms only charge the companies a fee(and only if successful). One other variation on this is Angel Networks, or syndicates, which invest as opportunities arise. However, the entry level investment size (€5,000 – €10,000) and lead times are not for everyone.

     

    So, after paying for your shares, those shares will sit in a broker account, or a fund, or in a nominee account(independent of platform). The company will then apply for EIIS certification from the Revenue. On receipt of this notification, investors will get a certification confirming same which can be filed with the Revenue to offset taxes paid in that year.

    What sort of people could this interest? The income which qualifies for tax rebates includes employment income, rental income, dividends and ARF distributions. The amount of income which can avail of EIIS has been increased from €250,000 to €500,000 in a single year under new rules to come into effect in January 2024. Also, note the investment must be for a minimum of 4 years. The new rules in the Finance Bill also have broken the standard 40% rebate rate into different bands which we have summarised in a previous article as follows:

     

    • 50% for businesses that ‘have not operated in any market’;
    • 35% for a business in its first EIIS fundraise within 7 years of its first sale;
    • 20% for a business in its second or subsequent EIIS fundraise;
    • 20% for a business expanding into new markets or regions; and
    • 30% for investments via a ‘Qualifying Investment Fund’, of which there is only one in Ireland.

     

    Quite apart from introducing potential confusion, the ‘core’ or standard EIIS rebate of an equity investment will now be reduced from 40% to 35%. On a more positive note, the 50% relief for early-stage pre-operating companies could be very interesting for Ireland and Irish investors. It won’t have escaped your attention that the trillion dollar tech club is entirely US based. That can be attributed to deeper capital markets and Silicon Valley tech leadership but could Ireland be a leader now? I’m thinking three big areas where the Irish ecosystem is quietly building real scale and a pipeline of early-stage opportunities. Here we go:

    Medical Technology/Bio-pharma: 14 of the 15 biggest MedTech players have significant operations including critical R&D functions in Ireland. Also, 12 of the biggest global pharma players are there too. That ecosystem is beginning to deliver a fly-wheel effect of training, management, success, entrepreneurial juices and world-class innovation.

    Cleantech: Irish engineering and construction companies are already leveraging their experience of executing huge hi-spec projects for tech giants like Microsoft and Intel, and global life sciences companies. These Irish companies are now key players in the build-out of EV battery gigafactories, data centres, clean energy manufacturing plants, pharmaceutical plants and chip manufacturing facilities all over the world. It is highly likely this hi-tech project expertise will generate new innovations and young companies to drive the cleantech revolution.

    Artificial Intelligence(AI): The creator economy is a $250 billion monster with all the major players from Google to LinkedIn to Meta/Facebook positioning their European HQs in Ireland. It is clear the creator economy is in the cross-hairs of AI and one can expect the Silicon Docks of Dublin to spin out a number of AI innovations. In fact, Spark will be bringing an exciting AI play to investors very soon.

     

    Furthermore, or a bit further afield, we should note interesting developments in Europe. Spark as a newly regulated entity with EU ‘passport’ will be looking at potential investment opportunities and encouraged by the latest data from Atomico’s “State of European Tech 2023” report:

     

    • Investment levels in European tech has reached $45 billion which is up 18% on 2020. Every other region is down over the same period.

     

    • Europe’s talent pool has grown from 750,000 to 2.3 million in the last 5 years. And, in 2023 Europe was a net beneficiary of people moving from the US to Europe. How Trumpy….

     

    • Europe now has 4,000 growth stage tech companies.

     

    • Europe (not just Mistral) can compete in AI globally. In fact, Europe has more resident AI talent than the US (120k vs 112k).

     

    There will be early stage investment opportunities in a faster world. And, frankly, waiting for IPOs could be a long way off. Thanks to huge private investment pools, companies like Stripe, Shein and OpenAI can stay private for longer, or forever. In the US alone, 70% of early stage/VC funding comes from pension funds and educational endowments. Europe has a bit of catching up to do; only 20% of funding comes from institutional sources. But….. on a contrarian view, this presents an opportunity for European and Irish private/individual capital to step into the gap and seize opportunities that typically might have gone straight to institutional/professional players. So, instead of fizzle sticks maybe think about sticking some funds into one of the EIIS access vehicles referenced above. As always, we recommend a portfolio-building approach, spreading your risk in smaller amounts across 8-10 investments per year. See the table below as a quick summary of what might work for you:

     

     

    Finally, if it’s speed and technology you’re looking for, then a 3-minute sign up process on the Spark platform is a pretty slick start to your early-stage investing journey.

     

  • And You Thought Only The Bots Did Comebacks…

    And You Thought Only The Bots Did Comebacks…

    As pantomime season approaches, it almost explains why most of the Conservative Party front bench are off the front pages. Unless, of course, you’re new Home Secretary, James Cleverly, and a wee bit envious of the coverage given to Nigel “I’m A C…….. Get Me Out Of Here”. Poor James, affectionately known in the corridors of Westminster as “Jimmy Dimly”, has been caught not once but twice using expletives in awkwardly public circumstances. However, if we are looking for real awkward stuff, consider the board of OpenAI. It has been quite the week. The board room coup and firing of CEO Sam Altman last weekend shocked the AI world and threatened to incinerate $90 billion of corporate value in OpenAI. However, a whirlwind four days later we were on to our fourth CEO, a potential 600 resignations out of 700 personnel, thousands of worried start-ups built on OpenAI’s flagship ChatGPT model and a potentially costless acquisition by Microsoft. Anyway, the fourth CEO happens to be Sam Altman who seems to have had the comeback of comebacks. So, all is back on track? Ehhh… not quite.

    The details as to what was the exact cause of the original board room bust up are not yet clear. But… the general gist of things is the tension between executives wanting to develop AI at break-neck speed and board members worried about the risks involved with super powerful models capable of Artificial General Intelligence(AGI). The advance hidden in the AGI acronym is the ability of a machine to reason and think, potentially in a superior way to a human being. Now, AGI(vs AI) was supposed to be some way off on development timelines, but reading between the lines something has spooked the members of the OpenAI board. The existential threat of out-of-human-control technology is a genuine fear but there are two key drivers as to why the “growth” champions want to keep moving, and fast:

    The Stakes: At a corporate and sovereign level, the risk of your competitors or geopolitical rivals gaining a lead in AI has huge market and political power implications. If someone gets a sufficiently big technological lead, you could be corporately or literally dead.

    The Incentives: We saw this week the incentive to be ahead in AI. The company nobody had ever heard of 6 months ago, Nvidia, released its Q3 results. Expectations were sky high evidenced by the market giving it a current market value of more than $1.2 trillion. And, yet it still beat expectations with its data centre chips (AI) revenues up 279% year-on-year and exceeding the sophisticated forecasting models of Wall Street’s finest by a whopping $2 billion.

    So, this tension between technology risk and technology development/growth is going to dominate AI discussion and regulation in the coming years. We have already seen the Biden administration put in place an Executive Order on AI safety and security, and Europe’s AI Act is imminent. However, these attempts to mitigate risk might lead to another comeback by a technology closely connected to another Sam.

    Unfortunately, Sam Bankman Fried faces Federal incarceration and won’t be restored any time soon to the helm of crypto platform FTX. Indeed, this week another platform founder in the space Changpeng Zhao or “CZ” of Binance was convicted of money laundering, fined $4 billion, stepped down from his executive role and narrowly avoided a prison sentence. Those are the bad headlines in the crypto world and could cause readers to miss the bigger picture. The reality is that one of the huge risks of AI is fraud, caused by deep fake imagery, false ID and misrepresentation. Now, crypto can help. Well, not crypto or cryptocurrencies because they are applications/digital assets. However, they are built on a really powerful technology, blockchain. And, blockchain technology is really good at ID verification, security and transparency/ traceability. Clearly, this could help with fears over AI and, like Nvidia, blockchain technologies could be a way to play or track the opportunity in AI. As always, we like to follow the money for evidence of our thinking. So, consider the following…..

     

    • Bitcoin is up 130% this year.
    • PayPal has launched a US dollar stablecoin ie a digital currency layered on to blockchain technology.
    • For those that giggled at NFT madness and wealth destruction, note Disney has launched its own NFT market platform in recent weeks.
    • And if you thought nobody wanted to read about their crypto wealth destruction, you might be surprised to hear that crypto exchange, Bullish, has just acquired industry publication, Coin Desk.
    • Blockchain.com just raised $110 million with a $7 billion valuation.
    • Blockchain payments firm, Fnality, in London just did a funding round for $95 million backed by Goldman Sachs.

     

    The funding rounds in particular indicate significant capital seeing a future for blockchain. Indeed, AI and its risks look like they are driving a faster blockchain comeback than investors expected. If the OpenAI rumours of a big AGI breakthrough are true, then the risk genie is truly out of the bottle and blockchain is on for a BIG comeback.

     

  • Government NOT Making It EIISy For Startups?

    Government NOT Making It EIISy For Startups?

    In the investment world of benchmarks and relative performance, portfolio managers will tell you every year is a tough year. World going thrillingly gang-busters? Gotta keep pace. Risk, slowdown and volatility? Don’t blow up, survive. Arguably, for startup businesses and founders dependent on external funding support there is a similar dynamic in play.

    In the giddy years, if your investment story isn’t ‘shiny’ enough you can be starved of capital which is diverted to other sectors. Then, in tougher more cautious funding environments like the last 12 months, you’re possibly juggling slower sales cycles and slower funding rounds and decisions. Worse still, no decisions. Uncertainty is a decision and business killer. And, we have no shortage of uncertainties fuelled by inflation, rocketing interest rates and geopolitical powder kegs in Ukraine and the Middle East. Now, smaller businesses and investors must deal with a fresh uncertainty coming from perhaps a surprising source, our own government.

    The last US President to close out a global geopolitical proxy war was Ronald Reagan but he’s also famous for his disdain of government over-reach. In a 1986 press conference he said, “The nine most terrifying words in the English language are ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help.’” Arguably, these words might resonate with businesses and investors currently wrangling with the latest Finance Bill and its changes to EIIS rules for equity investors and investee companies. Firstly, an easy-to-understand flat rate of 40% income tax rebates for Irish resident investors in qualifying Irish startup businesses has been chopped up into 5 different bands. The different bands, to come into effect on January 1st 2024, are as follows:

     

    • 50% for businesses that ‘have not operated in any market’;
    • 35% for a business in its first EIIS fundraise within 7 years of its first sale;
    • 20% for a business in its second or subsequent EIIS fundraise;
    • 20% for a business expanding into new markets or regions; and
    • 30% for investments via a ‘Qualifying Investment Fund’, of which there is only one in Ireland.

     

    Quite apart from introducing potential confusion, the ‘core’ or standard EIIS rebate of an equity investment will now be reduced from 40% to 35%. Clearly, this reduces the incentive to invest rather than increases the incentive with what could be considered particularly poor timing. We would highlight three key pre-existing factors as challenges for businesses seeking investment capital:

     

    • Higher interest rates: Remember our reference to capital chasing the “shiny” things? Well, interest rates rocketing to 5% are forcing all asset classes to increase their attractiveness by offering better returns. Think deposit rates, mortgage bonds, corporate bonds and other lower risk options to earn returns. They are all upping incentives/yields while the government is seeking to make startup investment less “shiny” or easy.

     

    • Financial Conditions: The Goldman Sachs research team tracks the broader financial climate and looks at lending patterns, terms, spreads, credit trading etc Its view on euro-area financial conditions is that they haven’t been this tight since the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2008-2009. This means businesses must search harder for investment, endure tougher terms and possibly find new banking channels unless your choice is….

     

    • Irish Banks: A senior Dublin legal eagle only recently told me that the banks are effectively ‘not open’ for any additional risk on their books before year end. True or not, the banking choices for SMEs are extremely limited as Nat West(Ulster) and KBC have pulled up sticks in Ireland and followed Rabobank and Danske Bank into retreat to their higher margin core markets.

     

     

    The recent memories of Covid-19 and the pitiful take-up of the government’s Credit Guarantee Scheme (just 12% of funds used by April 2021) hint at a limited banking system which isn’t massively interested in the SME sector. As a reminder, the government was guaranteeing 80% of the €2 billion in loans under this Credit Guarantee Scheme but it seems even a 20% share of the risk was too much for the Irish banks. But, also be mindful that 99% of active enterprises in the state are SMEs and account for 70% of employment. Of course, there are other institutional sources of capital.

    In the US 70% of venture capital comes from pension funds and educational endowments. In Europe, you’d be lucky if that number even reached 20%. So, despite the fabulous efforts of Ireland’s state funding agency, Enterprise Ireland, the role of private investors is critical in supporting early stage businesses. It is true that European government agencies and EU institutions(eg Horizon 2020, EIC) play a significant part and these latest EIIS changes in the Finance Bill are part of a broader harmonization of state aid. However, harmony works both ways.

    Due to limited competition and regulatory constraints, smaller Irish businesses are experiencing a much more difficult banking and funding environment than their European peers. In those circumstances, one would hope that European and Irish policy makers were encouraging private capital to fill the institutional and bank funding holes. Complicating simple tax treatments is not a good start and, to add to decision paralysis, there is a critical question outstanding in the new EIIS rules.

    The 50% rate applied to investments made in companies “not operating in any market” is leaving many people, both founders and investors, in the startup world scratching their heads. For us, we need to clarify the “not operating” phrase. Does this mean companies not generating revenues yet or is this demarcation geared towards companies in earlier risk stages like R&D, pre-API-type development phases? These are the questions which, left unanswered, will delay business funding and investment. Fatally, in some cases.

    Now, to finish on a more upbeat note. This writer, as a long-time analyst of investments and their returns, has always been wary of treating tax rebates as a means of re-setting your starting point. In other words, if EIIS of 40% is applied, your €1,000 investment cost only €600 post your tax rebate. In my world of valuations and RETURNS the more critical point was that your investment value remained €1,000. So, in a 35% EIIS rebate world the return of your €1,000 in subsequent exit value would amount to just shy of a 54% return. If that €1,000 becomes €2,000 that’s a greater than 3x return, irrespective of whether you started with a €600 or €650 cost. That broad quantum of outcome should still keep investors very interested in startup investing. However, as we hit GFC levels of funding tightness, the government may not be able to magic up more banks but it could certainly incentivise more private investors to support the 99%. Kinda like what governments used to say they do.

  • We Are All Start-Ups Now!

    So, it’s The Great Lockdown then. That’s the name given to this crisis period by the IMF and I’m hoping there’s another Isaac Newton out there. Well, not quite. Newton famously developed humanity’s knowledge of calculus, light refraction and gravity while quarantined during the Great Plague of 1665. Right now, behind the global public health priority of a CV-19 vaccine, the world is in urgent need of a gravity-defying economic plan. Newton’s falling apple suggested what goes up must come down. The task today is to figure out how a Lock-Down transitions to, hopefully, an Open-Up in the coming months. The laws of gravity and economics are challenging to say the least.

    Let’s start with a few numbers. How much are we really down? The IMF reckons global GDP in 2020 will shrink by a higher percentage (3 %) than any period since the Great Depression. That’s even more than the nadir of the credit crisis in 2009. In dollar terms, January IMF forecasts of 3% growth this year have in a matter of weeks seen $5.2 trillion worth of activity evaporate from those 2020 expectations. The IMF think the ultimate cost through 2021 could be closer to $9 trillion – that is the equivalent of Japan and Germany’s economies disappearing. Here are a few other numbers which hint at the scale of the gravitational pull on economic recovery:

    • Commodities: The IEA is forecasting oil demand for 2020 to fall by more than 9 million barrels per day (!). In April alone that number will fall by 29 million barrels per day. In effect, global economic activity/consumption has returned to 1995 levels. Good news for the climate but catastrophic for nations dependent on exporting commodities.
    • Banks: Ireland might escape the worst GDP implosions likely to hit Italy and Spain but a quick check of bank share prices in Ireland gives some clues as to the scale of capital destruction. The combined market valuations of AIB, BOI and IPTSB amount to just over €4 billion, or just over 20% of the combined book value of these banks ie the market is discounting €16 billion of capital at risk of wipe-out. Then, factor in a 2020 Irish government budget surplus of €2 billion vaporizing into an estimated €19 billion deficit. That’s another €21 billion we might not have in 2021.
    • Corporate Debt: Back in 2009 a critical factor in capital destruction was the amount of leverage in the banking system. We have written frequently about the risks of being dependent on “other people’s money”. Fast forward to 2020, and it is clear companies across the globe have feasted on ultra-low interest rates and loaded their balance sheets with debt. The Institute of International Finance estimated corporate debt levels among non-banks had rocketed to $75 trillion by the end of 2019. That figure was $48 trillion at the end of 2009.

    Yes, the numbers are quite scary. However, the intention of this article is not to frighten but rather to highlight the difference between two competing emergencies. Governments and central banks everywhere have moved swiftly to address the immediate cash flow issues of citizens and companies experiencing a collapse in income and revenues. The longer term issue is how creditors and debtors deal with damaged balance sheets and the need for additional capital to “Open-Up”.

    The Lockdown is a cash flow emergency. The Open-Up phase will probably be phased and slow. The entire world from universities to airlines will need capital buffers to navigate a possibly very changed world. Bluntly, the capital destruction estimated/discounted in the forecasts summarized above suggests too many capital-hungry mouths to feed. Previous years’ financial performances by established corporates may not be a helpful guide to the future. Companies will have to be realistic with their projections and tell their story very well. The risk profile for many sectors has endured a meteor strike and, in a sense, business models will have to be rebuilt, or in start-up terminology, pivot.

    Yes, the Great Open-Up will be a capital event without precedent.  We are all start-ups now.

  • Equity Crowdfunding – How Irish Private Investors can Identify Winners

    Equity Crowdfunding – How Irish Private Investors can Identify Winners

    With interest rates at an all-time low, Irish investors are looking for the best ways to get a return on their funds.  Investing in the right private companies can deliver high rates of returns.

    Equity crowdfunding makes it easy for small to medium sized investors to buy shares in private companies.

    Think of equity crowdfunding as an online version of Dragons’ Den where an entrepreneur is looking to raise (say) €300,000 in return for 20% of their company and ordinary individuals (i.e. the ‘crowd’) can invest anything from €100 upwards.

    The crowdfunding platform, such as Spark Crowdfunding, then pools all of these small investments into one large amount to buy the 20% share of the company on offer.

    Equity crowdfunding therefore gives small investors access to investment opportunities that were previously only available to angel investors or private equity companies.

    Picking Winners

    But now that smaller investors are able to purchase shares in these start-ups, how can Irish investors identify the best companies in which to invest?

    Here at Spark Crowdfunding, we see dozens of companies every week that are looking to raise new venture funding.  So, we’d like to share with you what are the factors we consider when deciding which companies have the highest chances of successfully raising funds from our database of investors and, equally importantly, what signals or clues emerge from the equity crowdfunding campaign itself that our investors should look out for.

    Factors we consider when trying to spot Winners

    1. Management Team

    The most important consideration for us is the Management Team and their skills, knowledge, attitude and aptitude.  A good Management Team with a bad idea is better than a bad Management Team with a good idea.  We want to know their track record in business and have they built successful companies previously.  The academic qualifications of the Management Team are also important.

    1. Results achieved to date

    We have a greater preference for companies that have actually achieved something, as opposed to a company that says it is going to achieve something.  Specifically, we like to see evidence of demand for the product in the form of Revenues from Sales.  Two investment industry buzz words of relevance here are ‘Proof of concept’ and ‘Traction’.  Evidence of both is preferable.

    1. Amount already invested by Management

    If the Management have personally invested money in the business, it tells us they have more to gain by it succeeding and more to lose if it fails.  We take comfort if their interests are aligned with shareholder interests.  The industry buzz term for this is ‘skin in the game’ and the more the better.  For the avoidance of doubt, when we say ‘invested money in the business’, we mean ‘has purchased shares in the company’, not ‘lent money to the company’.  Loans are only of interest if the management is prepared to convert them into shares at the same time as new investors are buying in.

    1. Scale Potential / International Potential

    A business has ‘scale potential’ if it can increase revenues exponentially without a commensurate increase in costs.  Tech or digital businesses are more likely to have this feature, whereas ‘bricks and mortar’ retailers tend to have limited capacity and growth potential.  We prefer companies that have ‘scale potential’, especially those with international scale potential.

    1. Use of Funds

    The use to which the newly raised funds will be put is another important consideration.  We prefer to see as much of the funds as possible going directly into areas that will generate Sales Revenues quickly, as opposed to building an infrastructure.  Related to this is the length of time before the company stops burning cash and becomes cash-flow positive.  We don’t like to see a prolonged period of cash-burn.

    1. Any Patents or other forms of Protection

    We look for businesses that have some protection from competitors or operate in industries with reasonably high barriers to entry.  A Patent can give companies a head-start over the competition, but other equally valuable forms of protection include specialist industry expertise or signed long-term contracts with major clients.

    1. Is the company an Enterprise Ireland Client?

    Companies that are clients of Enterprise Ireland tend to have been through a prior screening process and we take some comfort from this.  Equally valuable is a previous investment in the company from an experienced investor, other than a friend or family member.

    1. EIIS approved

    Our investors can reclaim 40% of their investment in the form of a tax rebate by investing in companies that are EIIS approved.  Clearly, these companies have a higher appeal to our investor database and are more likely to achieve their fundraising target as a result.

    1. B2C or B2B Company

    Crowdfunding investors have the potential to support companies in ways other than just making an investment.  This could include purchasing the product, making introductions to new sales channels or simply offering advice.  B2C companies tend to be more suitable for this.

    1. Exit Plans and Timeframe

    Investors in private companies typically look for an exit within 5-6 years and would expect to receive a multiple of the amount they initially invest.  What this multiple is depends on the risk profile of the investment.  For low risk investments a minimum of 3x would be expected while 10x would be expected for high risk investments.

    1. Realism in Financial Projections and Pre-Money Valuation

    We understand and appreciate entrepreneur ebullience and optimism more than most.  However, we also need to ensure that the Financial Projections and related Pre-Money Valuation are credible and based on realistic and assumptions.  Companies without a defensible valuation rationale will not succeed in achieving their equity crowdfunding target on Spark Crowdfunding.

    These factors highlighted above are what we consider before a campaign goes live on the site.  But once a campaign goes live, there are clues and signals that a savvy investor should look out for, in advance of pledging funds to a campaign.

    Signals that emerge from the Equity Crowdfunding Campaign that Investors should look out for

    1. How much is the Management Team investing at the current valuation?

    The best proof that Management believe the valuation represents a good investment opportunity is if they are also investing in this current fundraising round.  It is a very positive signal if Management are investing a meaning amount.

    1. How much are other investors investing? Sophisticated Investors or mugs?

    The beauty of an equity crowdfunding campaign is its transparency.  Everyone can see how much has been invested at any given point in time.  If others are investing, then the campaign is worth exploring further.

    1. How quick does the Campaign Promoter respond to questions about the fundraising?

    Questions arise during every crowdfunding campaign and can range from simple issues, like the number of employees, to more complex ones, like the strategy for international market penetration.  Investors can learn a lot about the CEO of a company, not least his or her communication skills, by the speed and depth of the answers.

    In conclusion ………

    Picking winners is difficult, particularly with early stage businesses.  But the landscape has changed and through equity crowdfunding, small and medium sized investors can now sit at the same table as the private equity and venture capital investors.

    As Ireland’s only equity crowdfunding company, Spark Crowdfunding is democratising finance by creating new investment opportunities for small and medium sized investors.  To receive announcements about Irish start-ups looking to raise funds from Irish investors join Spark Crowdfunding for free today.

    You don’t want to miss the next Uber!