Thursday - January 19, 2012.
by Georges van Hoegaerden
I was about to sing praise to San Francisco’s pension fund about their decision to deploy renewed focus on their commitment to Venture Capital. That is until I discovered the signs of the good ole’ pancake economics combined with the musical chairs of asset management. Instead, San Francisco’s pension fund should not even bother participating in Venture and here is why:
Read the complete article...
Tags: Asset Management, Pensions, CalPERS, SFERS
Sunday - January 15, 2012.
by Georges van Hoegaerden
In response to my article “
As a Limited Partner I feel uninformed” a representative from a valuation firm makes the same mistake as many Limited Partners have made. And that is to trust the content of documents to represent the actual risk deployed in Venture Capital. Here is my response to such a suggestion:
Even then. The actual deployment of risk can be and has been shoved under the rug of these generic and non-specific documents. These documents are not only lacking in the definition of risk, but severely lack controls to allow you as an LP to measure their compliance. And that is exactly why risk has deflated to uniformity and thus subprime Venture Capital.
Our reply above is a response to the representative’s reply (posted in full below) based on the aforementioned article:
“You should be able to be informed with:
1. Copies of the Limited Partnership tax returns.
2. Copies of Financial Statements with assets Marked-to-Market.
3. Copies of Minutes of General Partner meetings.
I am not an attorney, but usually General Partners have a fiduciary duty to provide at least these 3 items to Limited Partners. A review the Operating Agreement should provide information with the protocols for obtaining such info. Check how often you will receive these BEFORE making such an investment.”The full article is available on the iCFO group on LinkedIn
here
.
Tags: Limited Partners, Venture Capital, Risk
Friday - January 13, 2012.
by Georges van Hoegaerden
It is good to know that there are still smart, rather than simply cunning, people in the finance world.
And Gene Lee, Managing Director of Cove Point Holdings, a Family Office describes my views exactly in an interesting article published by Axial Market. Specifically he emphasizes how financial debt in a smaller middle market business can be very risky and limit the operating flexibility and growth prospects of a business.
We don’t believe that it makes sense to compound the operating risk of growing a smaller company and the risk from an ownership transition with the risk of a leveraged capital structure that could have bad consequences for a company if it misses a beat.
Primarily startups that work with subprime Venture Capitalists that have fragmented their investment risk and from the beginning do not have the ability to support the runway to upside completely are subject to the “blessings” of debt financing. The life-line of debt financing entering the startup world is an indicator of how
subprime Venture Capital, downside investing, and the fragmentation and deflation of risk erodes the opportunity for groundbreaking innovation.
Now, If we could only design an economic system that translates the sanity from these kinds of Family Offices into a Venture Capital playbook. Perhaps that is why this Family Office is going direct.
Read the full article
here
.
Tags: Debt financing, Startup, Family Offices, Limited Partners, Direct investing
Thursday - January 12, 2012.
by Georges van Hoegaerden
A Limited Partner responded to my article posted on LinkedIn named “
As a limited partner I feel uninformed” with some supportive references to the work the Institutional Limited Partner Association (
ILPA
) has done to structure the relationship between Limited Partners and General Partners. I have read their referendum and am not against the work of the ILPA, but feel the work of the ILPA so far offers little suggestions as to how to solve the systemic issues within the asset management realm (see “
The musical chairs of asset management”).
Yes, I do commend the ILPA for establishing "dining" etiquette, but it does not change the fact that the food being served is subprime. The way we construct financial systems (in violation of the free-market principles we boast about), by economic principle turns the discovery and arbitrage of the underlying asset subprime (sooner or later).
Already in VC 10 levels of bottom-heavy diversification proliferate lies about the real risk deployed in Venture. And the results show it. VC fails to make a dent in the 80% greenfield of technology adoption, nor produce returns for LPs in line with that gap.
So, while there are pragmatic things we can do with LPs to start to eradicate those economic lies (as described in my article), a much more fundamental change to the relationship and structure between GPs and LPs can turn their subprime alignment from subprime to prime.
Transparency is just a (small) part of the economic framework, and even then the kind of transparency is paramount in establishing a different economic outcome of risk.
And below is the original comment from a Limited Partner (in hotel real estate) on LinkedIn
(members only) to which the above was my response:
The Institutional Limited Partners Association has established a set of "best practices" that center around three guiding principles: 1) alignment of interests; 2) Governance; and 3) Transparency. Logically, if the GP has significant skin in the game by investing along side of the LP there is a higher likelihood they will be more selective in choosing where to deploy capital. The tenets of corporate governance can require a solution for many of the problems Georges discusses. These procedures can mitigate or eliminate conflicts of interest and related party transactions. And finally, if all the cards are on the table, readily seen by all parties, the dialogue becomes real and meaningful. The level of trust goes up and everyone benefits from an open, honest assessment. I am in the hotel real estate sector and we have adhered to similar principles for years. While not in total agreement with the ILPA, their efforts are to be commended as an attempt to bring some measure of standards to the industry.
Tags: ILPA, Limited Partners, Asset Management
Wednesday - January 11, 2012.
by Georges van Hoegaerden
The title of this article was the exact Internet search query that led a Limited Partner directly to our web site recently. We offer ways for Limited Partners to exercise their right to become informed, and transition to a more renewable investment climate for innovation.
Read the complete article...
Tags: Limited Partners, Economics, Venture Capital, Innovation, Subprime