Venture Capital Correcting Valuations

Bill Warner Monday, June 01, 2009

Venture capital firms are finally making corrections in their valuations in response to the downturn in the economy late last year. Read about the details in the WSJ, but this decline in valuations represents an adjustment to the value they place on their portfolios and to any company they are considering for new investments.

The adjustments are not uniform

The sharpest decline is occurring with later stage companies whose valuations declined about 43%, dropping from a median of $56.1 million in the fourth quarter to $32 million in the first quarter, all of which is pretty comparable to the decline in public markets last year. The median for the third quarter was $64 million. Likewise, their limited partners have felt the squeeze as well in that their portfolio values have dropped a similar amount.

Second round companies had a similar drop from $16.1million in the fourth quarter to $10 million in the first. But, first round companies faired well by rising from $6.6 million in the fourth quarter to $7 million in the first, but usually show less volatility to changes in the public markets.

Venture firms are buffering their pain

In the first quarter, 57% of all venture rounds were done by the current investors, giving them the chance to tamp down the pain of the write-down thus protecting the fund’s performance. New investors would be much more likely to want a more aggressive reduction in valuations.

Good and bad news for entrepreneurs

Entrepreneurs of start-ups that are going for their first venture round should expect valuations that track consistently from the last two quarters. Unfortunately, this is a bad time to have to go out to raise later stage VC money. The company will probably be faced with a down round where the company’s value is less than what it was at the time of the last round, and it’s all due to the economy. The hard thing to swallow is that even if the company performed well and met all its milestones, it still will get punished with a lower valuation.

If you need the money though, you have to do it. This is where tightening the belt and conserving cash pays off.

Filed Under: Angel Investment, Financing a Company, Managing Business Financials, Business Strategy and Planning, Starting a Business



Bill Warner is the Managing Partner of
Paladin and Associates, a business consulting firm in the Research Triangle Park area of central North Carolina, and is the Chairman of the Triangle Accredited Capital Forum, an angel investor network with over one hundred members throughout the southeast.


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