Does
Vintage Year Impact Fund Performance?
The intuition behind a
fund’s performance being related to its vintage year comes from the thought
that a fund formed in (or immediately prior to) poor economic conditions should
benefit from investing at lower average valuations. The lower average
investment values should theoretically drive superior returns because these
funds are able to ‘buy low’ compared to funds formed in good economic conditions.
In order to prove this hypothesis, we need to be able to validate that the
performance of funds formed in worse economic conditions is indeed superior to the
returns of funds formed in better economic conditions. However, when we
actually analyzed the data, we found that although fund performance was
correlated with vintage year, the primary driver appears to be the investment
stage rather than the lower valuations. In this case we will use a fund’s
Pooled IRR as the measure of performance and the average GDP 18 months after
fund formation as a mechanism to assess the economic situation of the vintage
year (since the average investment is made roughly 18 months after fund
formation).
When
we chart the Pooled IRR against average GDP growth 18 months after fund formation,
we see a generally positive relationship (correlation of 0.39). While the
observed relationship isn’t extremely strong, it is the opposite direction of
what we would expect if the relationship between vintage year and fund
performance were due to depressed valuations.
To support the argument
that funds formed in (or more specifically, investing during) worse economic
conditions outperform because they are able to invest at lower average
valuations, we would expect a negative correlation between Pooled IRR and GDP
growth. To better understand what is going on in our data, we need to
deconstruct several of the underlying assumptions that were used to make our
first hypothesis. In particular, we need to analyze whether lower venture
valuations are actually associated with worse economic conditions as well as
whether lower average valuations lead to superior returns.
Is
average investment size negatively correlated with GDP growth?
To
begin, we’ll analyze whether we actually observe materially lower valuations
during periods of worse economic performance. To validate our assumption, we
would expect to observe a positive relationship between average investment size
and GDP growth at time of investment. To help break out any sub-trends in the
data, we analyzed not only the total average deal size by vintage year, but we
also included the average deal size by investment stage. The following chart details
the relationship between these variables.
The correlation between
average GDP growth 18 months after fund formation (gray line) and average
investment size (black dot) in the above chart is roughly -0.10. While the
relationship is weak, this implies that when the economy improves, the average
deal size actually declines and when the economy worsens, average deal size
increases. This seems counter-intuitive until we consider the impact that the
mix of investments has on the total.
When we analyze the
relationship by investment stage, we see that the average seed investment size
has a positive correlation with GDP growth (0.56) while early stage and
expansion have roughly no correlation (at .08 and -.02 respectively) and later
stage average investment size have a slightly negative correlation with GDP
growth at -0.13. This implies that as the economy improves, seed investments
tend to appreciate as investors become more risk tolerant. Conversely, later
round average deal sizes appreciate as economic conditions deteriorate because
investors become more cautious and there is a slight flight to safety. This
relationship is reinforced by the correlation between mix and GDP growth. The
correlation between total proportion of deals coming from the seed stage and
GDP growth is 0.25, while the correlation between total proportion of deals
coming from later stage and GDP growth is -0.59. From these we can see that as
economic conditions improve, investors become more risk prone and shift
investing dollars towards earlier stage deals – increasing average seed deal
size and mix – while later stage deals see the same trend as economic
conditions worsen. Early stage investments appear to be pro-cyclical, while
later stage investments appear to be counter-cyclical.
Do
lower valuations lead to higher fund returns?
The
effect of investment mix is also highly relevant in the analysis of our second
assumption that lower average valuations lead to superior returns for the
vintage year, but let’s first look at the broad trend. In aggregate, the
relationship between average deal size and vintage year IRR is moderately
negative at -0.31, which aligns with our assumption. As deal size declines,
vintage year IRR increases. In the chart below, this trend is visible by
comparing the movement of the Pooled IRR (gray line) to the average total
investment size (black dots).
The mix of investment
also provides an interesting trend for fund returns. The relationships between
fund IRR and average deal size for early stage, expansion and later stage investments
are all negative (-0.25, -0.10 and -0.08 respectively) but the relationship for
seed investments flips with a positive relationship of 0.60. This implies that for
all investments other than seed investments, the fund IRR increases as average
investment size declines. But for seed investments, the fund IRR actually tends
to increase as the average seed investment size increases. This trend in seed
investments is coupled with a positive relationship between vintage returns and
the proportion of total deals made in the seed round (0.69). The observed
relationship between seed investments and fund performance indicates that fund
performance tends to increase as the average size and proportion of the seed
investments increase.
The
chart below displays the relationship between proportion of total investment by
stage and vintage year IRR.
Our second assumption
that vintage year returns are negatively related to average investment size is
actually a combination of two separate trends. Early stage through later stage
investments seem to follow our expected assumption and there is a negative
correlation between average deal size and fund returns. However, seed
investments exhibit trends opposite from what we would expect – vintage year
IRR’s tend to increase as the average seed investment size increases and as the
proportion of total made as seed investments increase.
Conclusion:
When we go back
to our original question of whether vintage year impacts fund returns, the
answer appears to be no for each of the different investment stages, but for
different reasons:
- Seed: While seed investments tend to be pro-cyclical from an average investment size perspective (average investment size increases as economy improves), the relationship between vintage year performance and average seed investment size is the opposite of what we would expect. In fact, vintages that have the highest average seed investment size (and proportion of total deals as seed investments) tend to perform better.
- Early Stage and Expansion:
Early stage and expansion investments didn’t exhibit any material relationship
between average investment size and GDP growth. The relationship between % of
total investment and GDP growth was marginally negative for early stage (-.11),
while it was fairly positive for expansion stage at 0.55. This implies that as
the economy improves, the proportion of total investments made as expansion
stage investments tends to increase. The relationship between average
investment size and vintage performance is slightly negative for both
investment stages (-.25 for early and -.10 for expansion), while the
relationship between vintage IRR and % of total investment is moderately
positive for both (0.32 for early and 0.28 for expansion). Both of these
investment stages roughly follow the performance expected in our original
hypothesis, but the strength of the relationship between the variables is too
weak to be meaningful.
- Later Stage: Opposite to seed investments, later stage investments tend to be counter-cyclical from an average investment size perspective, as the average investment size tends to increase as the economy worsens (and vice versa when the economy improves). This trend is reinforced by the fact that the proportion of total deals made in later stage investments also declines as the economy improves (-0.59 relationship). The relationship between average investment size and vintage year IRR for later stage investments is close to zero (-.08), but the relationship between proportion of investments made in later stage and vintage year IRR is strongly negative at -0.71. This implies that vintage years that have a higher proportion of later stage investments tend to perform worse. This trend seems to validate our hypothesis that vintage year does matter for later stage investments, but for a reason different from what we initially expected.
Overall, vintage year does not seem to exhibit a significant
effect on performance, at least not for the reasons initially expected. Our
hypothesis that vintage performance would be higher for those formed during
worse economic conditions did not seem to hold up at the aggregate level, or
for any of the specific investment stages. However, there were two interesting
trends that did emerge. Vintages with higher proportions of seed investments
have tended to perform better, even though they are usually formed in the best
economic conditions. Conversely, vintages with higher proportions of later
stage investments have tended to perform worse although they are generally
formed in poor economic conditions. While both of these trends prove to be
interesting, without further analysis and more robust statistical methods, we
cannot prove that they are anything more than interesting observations.
About
OCA Ventures
OCA
Ventures is a venture capital firm focused on equity investments in companies
with dramatic growth potential, primarily in technology and highly-scalable
services businesses. OCA invests in many
industries, with a preference for financial services and for-profit
education. Over the last decade, OCA has
invested three funds in over 45 companies.
In response to the increase of attractive seed-stage investment
opportunities, OCA Ventures created a seed program called OCA EDGE. OCA EDGE invests smaller amounts in seed or
very early stage rounds of highly scalable technology businesses. OCA Ventures partners with proven
entrepreneurs to build market-leading companies. OCA Ventures complements
management teams with a wide range of strategic, human and financial resources. OCA Ventures was initially backed by the
entrepreneurs who founded and built O'Connor & Associates, the derivatives
trading firm that was acquired by Swiss Bank (subsequently UBS). OCA Ventures
is based in Chicago and has investments throughout the United States.
Sources:
- NVCA VC Performance Report, Q2 2013
- World Bank Economic Data
- MoneyTree™ Report, Data: Thomson Reuters - Investments by Stage of Development Q1 1995 - Q3 2013
- Capital IQ Transactions report - 1/1/1995 - 12/31/2010 (n=71,715 transactions)
Notes:
- GDP +18 months was created by averaging the average annual GDP growth from year +1 and year +2 from the vintage year.
- Average transaction size was calculated over a similar time period as the GDP +18 months variable.
- Early stage roughly translates to series A investments, expansion roughly translates to series B investments and later stage refers to series C+.
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