Tokenized Venture Capital
Tokenization has the power to impact the entire VC industry, from the way venture capital is raised to the way it is invested in startups and projects. In an interview by David Sacks, the former PayPal COO said:
“I think Limited Partner interests are likely to be tokenized, along with most other illiquid assets. Eventually, illiquidity will be a competitive disadvantage in fundraising that only the top firms will be able to justify.”
To further elaborate on David's thought, tokenized funds will reshape the dynamics of how private equity and venture capital raise money and bring greater transparency that drives innovation and growth.
It was January 2012 on the Bitcoin Talk forum, when a software engineer from Seattle published a white paper with the title: “The Second Bitcoin White Paper".
The paper stated things like:
“We claim that the existing Bitcoin network can be used as a protocol layer, on top of which new currency layers with new rules can be built …. We further claim that the new protocol layers … will provide initial funds to hire developers to build software which implements the new protocol layers, and … will richly reward early adopters of the new protocol.”
Little did J.R. Willett know that his crazy idea would fuel a the start of a "Cambrian explosion", that created a couple of thousands of tokens and raised over $32 billion in the last seven years during their ICOs, and left venture capitalists trying to figure out the future of their business.
Tokens are a powerful new way of funding companies. The ICO phenomenon presents a huge threat to the traditional VC model. They offer an opportunity for liquid investments and faster exits. In 2017 and 2018, funds raised by blockchain startups through ICOs surpassed VC investments in the sector. The primary reason for the rise of ICOs is the difficulty that startups face when they try to raise a VC round.
While Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) have had their fair share of problems, they are still here with us. They have matured and morphed into IEOs (initial Exchange Offerings), with cryptocurrency exchanges acting as underwriters. Token Sales 1.0 were completely out of control, with the issuer marketing directly to the contributor and raising too much money, far beyond their needs.
But with IEOs, we are seeing a much more rational and sane approach. Exchanges are in the middle, acting as underwriters that filter projects, and limit the number of projects and the size of the offering. This allows innovators to access capital markets to get the resources they need.
Beyond IEOs, you can expect that in the future, Security tokens (STOs) are going to be huge. It's going to be a while before STOs take off, but when they do everything will be tokenized, including private equity and venture capital markets.
In the last four decades, VCs have helped create some of the greatest companies, like Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Facebook and in the process made tons of money for themselves and their LPs (Limited Partners).
Venture capitalists invest in equity, so they look for startups that have big and fast exit potential. VCs look for startups that can scale quickly, in a few years from initial funding, and will be acquired or go public at high valuations. With nine out of ten startups failing in their first three years, venture capital is high risk.
From their winning picks, VCs need to recover losses and make money for their investors. Wins don't happen a lot, but when they do, they're huge. Venture capital is a skewed-distribution business, sustained by highly lucrative, but low-probability payoff events. It's very much like whaling in the nineteenth century. When you look at the VC market, it's a very competitive industry.
VCs need to raise money to turn on the lights in the office. Limited Partners provide the capital, while General Partners invest it, into multiple startups, based on their investment thesis.
But regardless of the competition and the high risk involved, billions of dollars are poured into VC funds around the world, because of those few, big wins. The biggest problem that the venture capital industry faces is that VC funds are not liquid.
When it comes to investing in private companies, putting money into a venture is often the easy part. It’s getting the money out, hopefully, more than what was originally invested, that's the problem. Limited Partners are locked in for several years and in most cases are restricted from trading or selling their investments to other parties. Invested companies are expected to execute flawlessly for 5–7 years, and provide appreciation on the invested capital, through multiple fundraising rounds. An “exit” through a merger or an acquisition is usually the most common way startup investors can liquidate their positions.
After an exit event, VCs pass back the returns to the Limited Partners. In “The Business of Venture Capital”, Mahendra Ramsinghani describes the problem as follows:
“A VC partnership is a 10-year blind- pool, a long relationship in which investors have limited ability to exit, and no clarity of outcomes.”
Making VC funds liquid can and will transform the entire industry. Venture capital funds will become more inclusive, within regulatory frameworks, and potentially attract billions of new dollars. Liquid VC funds, will not only give qualified investors the option to exit early. It may also provide opportunities to increase IRR (Internal Rate of Return). Liquidity can provide a faster feedback loop. If people believe in the fund, the token price will go up.
When a company exits, the returns go back into the fund. Smart contracts can seamlessly transfer money and ensure LPs and GPs receive the correct returns instantly. With increased IRR, General Partners will be in a better position to raise a new fund. Liquidity opens venture capital to new audiences, making funds more inclusive. This is a huge advantage because more investors can afford to participate, without the need to forget about their money for 7-10 years.
Tokens will be easily tradable on cryptocurrency exchanges. While secondary markets exist for LP positions, they are illiquid and the process can be very slow. In a tokenized fund, investors can enter, exit, and re-enter a fund as many times as they want. If an investor decides they would rather invest elsewhere, they sell their tokens at the current market price.
Venture capital is a powerful investment vehicle that allows emerging technologies to grow and develop. Tokenizing funds remove the rigid positions of GPs & LPs and allows them to collaboratively map investment efforts, with more liquidity to invest in even more startups. Tokenizing venture capital is even more powerful, and lets early-stage startups, not only survive but thrive.