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Venture Capital trends

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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Venture capitalists have started warning their portfolio companies to watch every dollar since additional capital will be much harder to come by, according to an article in the Boston Business Journal.

In addition, VCs are advising startups to trim overhead and even “mothball” their operations – reducing a company to its core management team and intellectual property – in order to ride out the current capital crunch and recession.

Later stage companies will find it tougher to raise new rounds of capital in today’s economic climate. Although many VCs have capital to invest, they are concerned about the amount of reserves they have set aside for their portfolio companies, and are doubling or tripling their reserves from the typical 10 percent. Venture capitalists are also spreading the word that every startup needs to be cautious and run lean.

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Over a 10-year time horizon, venture capital firms returned an average of nearly 33%, compared to a paltry 3.5% for the S&P 500 index. But those returns include 1999 and 2000, the last few really good years for venture capital, according to an article in Business Week. Moving forward, the 1-, 3- and 5-year returns won’t look nearly as good, and when institutional portfolio managers realize the returns barely exceed the S&P 500, they are going to be reluctant to invest in such a risky asset class. Experts predict up to 30% of institutional investors may go elsewhere, trimming the ranks of venture capital firms.

Yet entrepreneurs and the U.S. economy will still need venture capital, and this painful period of adjustment may help strengthen the venture capital industry in the long run. The surviving VC firms will emerge leaner and smarter, with some of them engineering new ways to achieve higher returns, says Tom Crotty, of Battery Ventures in Boston. Others will turn to emerging markets such as India and China for opportunities.

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