Bison

Industry intelligence that matters

Tag: Performance

Venture Capital Continues its Hot Streak

by Michael Roth

Bison’s June 30, 2015 final benchmarks were published last week. Using our cash flow dataset (“Bison funds”), we are able to analyze close to 1,300 North American private equity funds and identify industry trends.

Horizon IRR

The chart below illustrates the 1, 3, 5, and 10-year horizon IRRs for North American All PE, Buyouts, and Venture Capital / Growth Equity.

Q2 2015 Horizon IRRs

For the second consecutive quarter, the venture capital industry has a higher IRR over the 1, 3, and 5-year periods than the buyout industry. VC is still lagging buyouts on the 10-year horizon but it has narrowed the gap by 100 basis points over the last two quarters.

Time-Weighted Returns

The chart below looks at the returns for private equity and the public markets using an apples-to-apples time-weighted methodology.

Q2 2015 TWRR

Over the short-term and long-term, private equity is outperforming the public markets, represented here by the Russell 2000 and Russell 3000 total return indices. Similar to the horizon IRRs, venture capital is outperforming buyouts over the 1, 3, and 5-year periods. Over the 10-year period, buyouts are still outperforming venture capital by more than 200 basis points. Looking at the medium-term (3 and 5-year horizons), the public markets are outperforming through June 30, 2015. It will be interesting to see how these numbers hold up as of Q3 and Q4 2015.

Investment Activity

Investors are surely happy with the strong returns but they must also be pleased that GPs were busy selling assets and locking in gains. The chart below illustrates the ratio of distributions to contributions during each of the last four quarters. A ratio greater than 1.0 means there were more distributions than contributions in the quarter.

Dist vs. Calls

Both the venture capital and buyout industries saw their Distributions/ Contributions ratios jump in Q2 2015. Given how tumultuous the public markets were during the second half of 2015, it will be interesting to see how this ratio changes in Q3 and Q4. The surge in distributions is also notable for the VC industry because the inability to return money to investors has been an issue that I have highlighted before.

 

How Do GPs Calculate Net Asset Value?

by Michael Roth

For funds that are not fully exited, the net asset value (“NAV “) is the primary component of its total value. This means the NAV plays a critical role in determining a fund’s performance metrics (TVPI multiple and IRR). It is the sum of each portfolio company’s NAV and these values are determined by the GP. As a result, it is important to understand how a GP values their portfolio companies and the accounting standards that guide this process.

At the gross cash flow level, this includes the value of the GP’s equity ownership stake in each portfolio company that has not been sold. At the net cash flow level, this includes: (1) the value of the GP’s equity ownership stake in each portfolio company that has not been sold and (2) the amount of carried interest that has been accrued by the manager given the fund’s current value.

Technically speaking there is a hierarchy, broken up into three levels, that GPs must follow when they value companies. The hierarchy below has been paraphrased from the FASB’s “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (Topic 820)”:

Level 1 –  Investments must be valued using objective, observable, unadjusted quoted market prices for identical investments in active markets on the measurement date, if available.

Level 2

  1. Objective, observable quoted market prices for similar investments in active markets.
  2. Quoted prices for identical or similar investments in markets that are not active.
  3. Inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset.
  4. Inputs that are derived principally from or corroborated by observable market data by correlation or other means.

Level 3 – Subjective unobservable inputs for the investment where markets are not active at the measurement date. Unobservable inputs reflect the firm’s own assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the investment and should be developed based on best information available under the circumstances. The entity’s own data shall be adjusted if information is reasonably available without undue cost and effort that indicates that market participants would use different assumptions.

In short, the majority of private equity portfolio companies are considered “Level 3” assets because they are illiquid assets that are only valued on a quarterly basis. As a result, companies can be valued by using a combination of factors that are ultimately subject to the GP’s discretion. The exception to this “rule” is when a GP exits a company via the public markets and holds publicly listed stock. Those assets will be “Level 1” assets.

A Deeper Dive into Level 3 Assets

Since there is considerable leeway with valuing Level 3 assets, I will discuss the most common methodologies used by GPs: industry comparables, precedent transactions, and the discounted cash flow (“DCF”) method.

Industry Comparables Method

The industry comparables method seeks to find publicly listed companies whose business operations either fully or partially match the business operations of the company being evaluated. Comparable companies are initially filtered by geography and sector. From there, GPs will look to narrow down the peer set further using either revenue, EBITDA or enterprise value (“EV”) metrics. For example, if I am valuing a company with an EV of $300 million, it is more appropriate to compare it to companies of a similar size rather than a company that has an EV of $4 billion.

Once GPs have a comp set, they will find the average EV/EBITDA multiple and use that multiple as the basis for valuing their company. Depending on company metrics, GPs may make adjustments to the multiple higher or lower. Factors that could impact this include higher (or lower) historical revenue or EBITDA growth, higher (or lower) forecasted revenue or EBITDA growth,  higher (or lower) EBITDA margins, higher (or lower) debt levels, and company size relative to the comps. These are the most common factors and offer a sense of possible areas where subjectivity could come into play.

Precedent Transactions Method

Precedent transactions are recent acquisitions that have occurred of similar companies. GPs will use the valuation metrics (EV/EBITDA or EV/revenue) to value their companies. This data can be difficult to find and is often limited to transactions of public companies. The other common issue with this method is that valuation information is often stale because precedent transactions occurred several years earlier when market conditions were different. Generally speaking, precedent transactions that have occurred within in the last year are considered to be valid data points.

DCF Method

The discounted cash flow methodology uses a GP’s cash flow model to estimate the company’s value. This is the most subjective method and has a tendency to be viewed with skepticism whenever it is used. That is because you are relying on the GP’s estimates for a large number of inputs, including revenue growth, EBITDA growth, and EV/EBITDA multiples and the discount rate. A slight adjustment to any one of these factors could have a meaningful impact on a company’s valuation.

When a GP uses a DCF model to value a company, it is important to understand why they are doing this and what assumptions they are using. At Bison and from my prior fund of funds days, I have not seen a DCF model used by itself very often. Sometimes, a GP will use this alongside the industry comparables methodology. In this situation, they will assign a weighting (ex. 50/50 or 75/25) to the valuation generated by the industry comps method and the DCF method.

Wrapping Up

Knowing how a GP calculates the NAV helps inform your opinion about the validity of the fund’s performance metrics but it can also offers insights into the GP’s character – are they fair and honest; do they have a tendency to be aggressive; or maybe they are slow to adjust to a changing situation. From an LP perspective, make sure to ask the right questions – how and why are you valuing your companies in this way? From a GP’s perspective, make sure that you are consistent and transparent about your valuation process. Nothing raises red flags more than dramatically changing your methodology or shrouding your process in secrecy.

The Horizon IRR Metric Keeps Being Misused

by Michael Roth

Accurately measuring performance and estimating asset class returns is the most important part of the asset allocation process. The reason it is important is two-fold: (1) return estimates have the biggest impact on your asset allocation model and (2) studies have shown that asset allocation is a critical component of returns.

Considering this, industry trade groups, like the BVCA, and service providers, like Cambridge Associates, continue to inappropriately tout a horizon IRR calculation in comparison to the public market’s 1,3, 5, or 10 year time weighted rate of return.

As I have discussed previously, it is a mistake to think an IRR and a time weighted return are one and the same. Both are annualized rates of return but they deal with cash inflows and outflows in different ways. IRR specifically accounts for the timing and size of cash flows when calculating the returns generated while the time weighted return specifically excludes the impact of cash flows and weights the returns in each time period equally. Each method has their shortcomings and ideal use cases. Take these metrics out of context and they can be misleading.

What difference does a return calculation make?

I used a portfolio of 481 North America and Global buyout funds from Bison’s cash flow dataset to analyze the difference between the horizon IRR and the time weighted return. Both return calculations were performed using quarterly cash flows. Read the rest of this entry »

A PME Analysis of Private Equity

by Michael Roth

Before we move on to 2015, let’s take one final look at where private equity stands as of Q4 2014. Using our cash flow data, I compared the pooled net IRR for the 2000 through 2012 vintage years to the Bison PME for the Russell 2000®. I focused on North American and Global funds, where the Russell 2000 could be a relevant public market comp. Funds in this analysis account for close to $1 trillion of committed capital.

Buyout Funds vs. Russell 2000

North American and Global buyout funds have outperformed the public markets in nine out of the thirteen years analyzed.

12.31.2014 Buyout PME

Buyout funds enjoyed strong outperformance of the public markets from 2000 through 2005. Since then, buyout fund performance has been mixed with four of the last seven vintage years underperforming the markets. The reason for this is two-fold. Everyone knows how funds from these vintages, primarily 2006 – 2008, did some bad deals (think TXU) and have had to lengthen their holding periods to try and recoup their cost (think Freescale). A higher number of bad deals and longer holding periods have clearly hampered returns for these vintages.

What also can not be ignored is the incredible bull market in public equities over the last six years. The Russell 2000 has tripled since it bottomed out in 2009. This is not meant as an excuse for the private equity industry but an acknowledgement of the public market’s incredible, and probably unrepeatable, returns over the last six years.

More recent vintages seem to be showing favorable signs. However, it can be hard to draw definitive conclusions from PME analysis when funds are only nearing the end of their investment period and have not yet had time to mature.

Venture Capital & Growth Equity vs. Russell 2000

North American and Global VC/GE funds have outperformed the public markets in just six of the thirteen vintage years analyzed. However, four of the six years have occurred since 2007 – highlighting the VC/GE market’s recent strength.

12.31.2014 VC PME

The venture industry has also suffered due to the strong public markets while underperformance in the early 2000s can be attributed to the dot-com crash. Compared to the buyout industry, VC/GE performance against the public markets has been mixed, though there are encouraging signs in the more recent vintages.

Wrapping Up

Compared to each other, the buyout industry has bested the VC/GE industry in eight of the thirteen years. However, VC/GE have outperformed buyouts in four of the last six year through 2012. Whether or not VC/GE can sustain this recent strength will likely depend on their ability to exit these high momentum companies which have seen tremendous valuation increases over the last few years.

The Problem With Long Nickels PME

by Michael Roth

Long Nickels was the industry’s first foray into comparing private equity to the public markets. At first glance, Long Nickels is intuitive, simple to execute, and its output is an IRR measure which is easily understood. This is likely why early results of our LP survey indicate Long Nickels is the most widely used PME methodology. Despite its widespread adoption, the Long Nickels calculation makes certain assumptions that need to be highlighted so investors understand why the calculation can be unreliable with typical private equity fund cash flows.

Read the rest of this entry »

Making sense of PMEs

by Michael Roth

The private equity industry has always had its own way of measuring performance. Unlike a mutual fund, investors are committing to a blind pool of capital where GPs have discretion over the timing of inflows and outflows. This is why there is a difference in how you measure performance between a private equity fund and an equity mutual fund. Analyzing multiples of invested capital and IRRs – as opposed to a time weighted rate of return on public markets – allows investors to analyze a fund’s performance relative to its peers. However, if you are looking to compare a private equity fund’s performance to the public markets, you need to calculate a public market equivalent (“PME”) return measure. There are five main PME methodologies: Read the rest of this entry »

The New Way to Benchmark Private Equity

by goksor

Let us assume for a minute that performance persistence in private equity and venture capital is real.  This begs the question: how do I measure performance and how do I pick winners? Read the rest of this entry »

Are Quarterly VC Returns Even Worth Celebrating?

by Michael Roth

Venture Capital is an asset class characterized by a longer time horizon as startups are nurtured from idea to business model to successful (and maybe even profitable!) business. While buyout funds typically look to exit a company in three to five years, venture funds tend to take a little longer for their portfolios to develop.

With this in mind, it is a little curious to see the National Venture Capital Association (“NVCA”) joyously announce that VC returns saw a dramatic increase in Q4 2013. Heck, they even outperformed the public markets! The VC returns were largely driven by early stage funds who saw 14% quarterly returns in Q4 2013. Bison believes the VC funds below are the primary contributors to these strong returns. Read the rest of this entry »

Performance (Bison) vs. Momentum (Mattermark)

by Michael Roth

Big data is coming to the private markets. New datasets covering management, web traffic, media signal, fundraising, and returns are quickly being aggregated together. One startup that has recently made headlines is Mattermark. They use soft signals to quantify Momentum Scores for startups. In a recent blog post, they used this score to create synthetic portfolios for investment firms to see which firm had the strongest portfolio. This investor ranking caught our attention here at Bison since it allowed us to create a comparison with our Performance Score, which ranks firms based on historic fund performance. Read the rest of this entry »

Best North American Mid-Market Buyout Firms Currently in Market

by Michael Roth

Last week on the Bison Blog, we provided an overview of the fundraising market for North American buyout funds. Now we will take a look at a snapshot of some of the best performing firms that are currently raising a fund between $1 billion and $4 billion. We narrowed down the field using the Bison Performance Score, which is based on a firm’s prior fund performance.  The chart below lists five funds currently in market (sorted by fund size) with strong performance scores. Read the rest of this entry »