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VC and private equity compensation is typically paid out using a 2 percent annual management fee on capital committed to the fund and 20 percent of the profits each time a portfolio company is sold. It is known as the 2 and 20 model. According to National Venture Capital Association, 2-and-20 has indeed stood the test of time and seems to be the right mix for the majority of firms and LPs.

There is a problem in the intersection of the 2 percent part of that equation and large venture funds, however. For example, a fund with $1 billion in capital can generate $20 million in annual management fees to a venture firm, completely independent of the quality of investments in the fund.

Kauffman Foundation Report

Kauffman Foundation published a report in May 2012, titled “We Have Met the Enemy….And He Is Us” on the state of the Venture Capital market with a focus on the GP-LP relationship. This analytical report highlights a series of lessons from 20-years of venture investing by the Foundation. The report received a lot of coverage in the media and should be required reading for those interested in the venture ecosystem.

One of the major conclusions from the report is that the 2-and-20 compensation structure for venture capital funds is a one-size-fits-all approach that mis-aligns incentives and can help VCs to get paid handsomely while their funds perform abysmally.

Some of the respondents interviewed for the report said they’d be amenable to changing how they’re compensated, and there’s even some realization within the industry that 2-and-20 has created bad incentives.

Possible new compensation structure

For high-demand funds, a new compensation structure could actually help them generate even more profits. For example, a top fund could hold an auction that initiates a bidding war between would-be investors, perhaps generating a 30 percent cut of profits on exits instead of 20. That would then potentially enable the fund to decrease the 2 part of the equation and better align its own priorities with those of its investors.

According to the report, the industry may move toward a ‘budget-based’ replacement for the 2 percent management fee. Under this scenario, Venture Capitalists would agree to manage a fund for a fixed cost that covers salaries, rent and other overhead items, which would remove much of the incentive to raise larger and larger funds.

As for the 20 percent payout, a better structure would pay VCs a percentage of profits only after the fund’s returns exceed an agreed-upon public markets benchmark. In this model, a fund that generates returns 3 percent greater than a public benchmark could take a 20 percent cut of profits for itself. If returns exceed public markets by 6 percent, for instance, the fund could take a 25 percent cut of profit.

However, investors in venture funds are afraid that if they become vocal about changing VCs’ compensation structure, they’ll get frozen out of the best funds. Negotiating a departure from 2-and-20 with one venture investment may invite questions as to why LPs didn’t negotiate similar deals with all the venture funds they plow cash into.

The commitment to 2-and-20 remains, and unless there’s an outcry from LPs, there’s little reason to think it will change.

 

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It used to be that an IPO (initial public offering of stock) marked a watershed moment for venture capital managers, as well as entrepreneurs, helping them cash out their early investment or inject a much-needed source of capital into a successful startup.

But now even the well-respected Gordon Davidson, chairman of the law firm Fenwick & West, and a veteran of more than 100 mergers and acquisitions and some 30 initial public offerings, claims the IPO is on the wane. Instead, a new form of venture capital financing called “DST deals”, named after the Russian investment firm Digital Sky Technologies, is playing a bigger role in funding later-stage startups.

You may recall that DST poured tens of millions of dollars into Facebook and Zynga at critical stages. DST-like deals are essentially private money that is applied to buying shares in the company by investors, venture capital firms or enabling key employees to buy shares.

An article in USA Today points out that DSTs have grown increasingly popular because costs and regulatory paperwork have made it so much harder to go public today. Private DST style investments essentially put off the headaches of going public until a later date, while at the same time, giving the startup additional liquidity.

Some examples of DST type financing include Facebook, which raised $300 million last year from DST and $90 million from Elevation Partners, whose partners include U2’s Bono; Twitter, which raised $100 million from its previous investors and T. Rowe Price, the mutual fund company; and Yelp, a website for ratings and reviews of local businesses, which landed $100 million from Silicon Valley private-equity firm Elevation Partners in January of 2010.

Such private equity investments in late-stage start-ups also let the founding employees cash in on their holdings sooner than they would under the rules for initial public offerings.

Do you think DST-style investments from venture capital firms, hedge funds and wealthy investors are going to replace IPOs, at least in the near future, as a preferred source of capital? Add your comments below.

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California and its hedge fund industry is clearly benefiting from the state’s reputation as a cleantech innovator and early adopter of energy efficient technology, according to a new data released by various industry groups.

A story from Reuters reveals that manufacturing employment in California’s green economy expanded by 19 percent from 1995 to 2008, despite a drop of 9 percent in total manufacturing employment during that period.

Collaborative Economics, a Silicon Valley-based firm which tracks California’s economic gains or losses from technology for the California Green Innovation Index, noted the following trends:

– Global venture capital investment in clean technology is becoming more concentrated in California. The state has attracted $11.6 billion in cleantech venture capital investment since 2006, roughly 24 percent of the global total.

– California is the top U.S. state in patent registrations in green technology, beating out second-ranked New York by more than 150 patents from 2007 to 2009.

– California dominates the U.S. in terms of solar energy production, representing over 90 percent of total U.S. net solar electricity generation in 2007.

– Green manufacturing in California is concentrating in the Bay Area (55 percent), Orange County (54 percent), and San Joaquin Valley (38 percent).

“By revenue, energy represents the largest industry in the world, ” according to F. Noel Perry, a businessman and founder of the nonpartisan, nonprofit Next 10, which released the California Green Innovation Index. “Energy technology is emerging as the next breakout technology revolution. And like information technology, ET is an emerging trillion-dollar market. California is on course to dominate this market.”

Is a cleantech or California-based venture capital job or investment in your future? Add your comments below.

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The New Face of Venture Capital

October 4, 2010

The Venture Capital industry is splitting into various segments to serve different “customers,” much like the car companies expanded their product line in the early days of their industry. So says Chris Dixon, Cofounder of Hunch, an online recommendations site based in New York City, and an experienced investor in early-stage technology companies such as […]

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LA Primed for Venture Capital Job Growth

September 20, 2010

A new report from the Pepperdine Private Capital Markets Project suggests that Los Angeles is primed for growth from venture capital investment, particularly in the Cleantech sector, and may even surpass Silicon Valley in that respect. Researchers interviewed more than 150 venture capital professionals in early 2010 to gather data for the Pepperdine Private Capital […]

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Venture Capital Gains Momentum in New York

September 6, 2010

The venture capital sector in New York imploded after the dot-com bust, just like its cousins out on the west coast and elsewhere. But over the past decade, the city has been slowly retooling into a venture capital hotbed where start-ups in software development, media and advertising are thriving. Google’s acquisition of DoubleClick had an […]

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Venture Capital Pros Need to Be a Talent Scouts

August 23, 2010

Venture capitalists today, more than ever, need to be talent scout, says Saad Khan, in a guest article for Forbes. Khan is a partner at the venture capital firm of CMEA Capital where he leads CMEA’s Web, digital media, and twinkle-stage investments in Pixazza, Blekko and Jobvite. As incubators for embryonic companies, venture capitalists have […]

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The Pendulum Swings in Venture Capital Jobs

August 9, 2010

Venture capital website Xconomy recently interviewed Kate Mitchell and Rory O’Driscoll, both general partners at Scale Venture Partners, a Foster City, CA-based firm that focuses on helping startups through the middle stage of their growth, for their take on the wild swings in the venture capital industry. Mitchell is also the incoming chairperson for the […]

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Venture Capital Firms Taking on the Role of Angel

July 26, 2010

Venture capital firms want a piece of the angel investors’ lunch. A growing number of established venture capital firms are investing smaller amounts in early-stage companies, in an effort to “seed” more successful start-ups. Dow Jones reports that many are investing in consumer Internet and software-as-service start-ups, since many of these types of companies are […]

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Challenging Times for Venture Capital Jobs

July 12, 2010

Greentechmedia recently interviewed venture capitalist Ullas Naik, a partner at Palo Alto-based Globespan Capital Partners, for his thoughts on the current VC environment. One big challenge facing VCs right now is generating liquidity through IPOs. “The VC model is predicated on the existence of a healthy IPO market,” Naik said. VC firms need a few […]

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