Risk Considerations for Angel Investors
Put Risk
into Perspective
Angel investing is, plain and simple, risky. On the other hand, the most successful angel
groups are well rewarded. They achieve exit multiples in excess of 4X.
Crowd funding platforms make it easy to diversify among several startup
and early stage companies via the internet.
The clear and present danger of that strategy is that the winning
investments might not compensate for the losing investments. Secondly, many companies present well, but
are inherently more risky or more prone to failure than they appear.
The successful angel investor should do three things. First, understand the risks associated with
each investment. Second, be
selective. Avoid investments where the
risks are just too great. Third, control
and manage the risks.
One of the reasons why groups of angel investors and professionally
managed angel investment funds tend to perform well is because they have the
experience necessary to evaluate and understand risks and because by taking an
active role in the investee company they can help manage and control those
risks.
Some
Thoughts About Risk
“Go out on a limb. That’s where the fruit is.” (Jimmy Carter, 39th US President (1977-81). 2002 Nobel
Prize for Peace,. b.1924)
“Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight
of the shore.” (Andre Gide, French
writer, humanist and moralist, 1947 Nobel Prize for Literature, 1869-1951)
“We took risks. We knew we took them. Things have come out against us.
We have no cause for complaint.” (Robert
Frost, American poet, 1874-1963)
“Take calculated risks. That is quite different from being rash.”(
General George S. Patton, American General in World War I and II, 1885-1945)
“Financial risk taking is the practice, within a well-defined
investment, risk management philosophy and business model, of creating economic
value by finding profitable opportunities to take financial risks. Financial risk management is the qualitative
and quantitative identification and measurement of risk sources and the
formulation of plans to address and manage these risks.” (Tim Grant, MSc in
Metallurgy, MA in Financial Engineer, Entrepreneur and Managing Director at
O’Connor, responsible for Global Risk, Quantitative Research and Technology)
Company
Specific Risks
Most startups fail. There is a
plethora of literature about startups, the risks they face, the reasons they
fail and the reasons they succeed. Many
of the reasons are specific to the company.
The product might be excellent but if the management is poorly organised
or can’t find enough customers the business is likely to fail. We categorise company specific risks into
three basic groups.
The most commonly cited reasons for failure of new businesses are what
we call “core business issues.” These
problems tend to appear early in the life cycle of a company. Less commonly cited, but also prevalent, are
organisational problems. Finally, the
least likely issues appear to be legal or regulatory in nature. Notably, outright fraud is rarely cited as
being the reason for failure.
Core business issues
·
Lack of
demand for the product
·
Inability
to achieve economies of scale/scope
·
High
costs
·
Lack of
capital
Organisational problems
·
Poor
management
·
Poor
corporate governance
·
Too few
staff
·
Over-reliance
on key people
·
Founder
attrition
·
Disagreements
among the shareholders
Legal issues
·
Trademark
and patent disputes
·
Regulatory
problems
·
Fraudulent
corporate governance
Non-Specific
Risk
Sometimes companies fail due
to factors that are generally outside of the company’s control. These are external factors. We categorise these issues into two groups – microeconomic and
macroeconomic.
Microeconomic
Risks
·
Low or non-existent demand for the product
·
Low demand at or near the general cost of
production
·
The product is not attractive relative to the
alternatives
·
Market is crowded with competitors
·
Better, stronger, more efficient competitors
dominate the market
·
Key production inputs are too expensive or too
hard to find
·
Alternative competing technologies shorten the
product life cycle
Macroeconomic
Risks
·
Recession lowers demand for the product
·
Capital becomes too scarce
·
Regulator or central authority introduces rules
that stifle the market for the product
·
Input and/or output prices change adversely
·
Foreign exchange rates change adversely
·
Technology changes make the product obsolete
·
Fashion trends, demographics, and consumer
preferences shift adversely
·
The social or political environment changes
·
War, terrorism, fire, flood, and other types of force majeure
General
Risks
The last
category we address is the risks inherent to the asset class and to investing
generally.
·
Lack of liquidity – there is not a readily
liquid market for shares and debt securities of private companies.
·
Foreign exchange risk – exchange rates between
the investor’s currency and the currency in which the shares or debt securities
are denominated may move adversely.
·
Changes in taxation regimes – during the life of
the investment there may be adverse changes in the tax treatment of gains and
losses the investor faces.
·
Changes in the investor’s financial needs and
circumstances –What might have been an appropriate investment for an investor
at one point in time may become inappropriate at a later point in time. The investor might not be able to liquidate
the investment or make other portfolio adjustments to suit the new financial
needs and circumstances.
What’s an
Investor to Do?
The risks we’ve listed are
not exhaustive and the types of risks embedded in the investment may vary
depending on the particular circumstances.
We outline some techniques investors can adopt.
Risk
Assessment
Risk assessment means
understanding the sources of risk in an investment and determining how and
whether those risks might become the sad reality. Educated investors readily have many of the
tools and techniques at their disposal.
We outline some of them here:
Interview the management and founders of the
prospective investee company.
Assess the depth, quality and experience of
management.
Test the product the company produces.
Research the product. Find
out what drives demand for the product, what solution the products provides its
consumers, who are the competitors and what advantages do they have.
Review the company’s business plan. Understand the critical assumptions and how
variances in those assumptions impact the financial model.
Look at the company in light of strategic analytical frameworks. Michael Porter’s competitive analysis
framework is particularly useful.
Another useful tool is a SWOT analysis, which is used to assess the
company’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats and how they impact
the company.
Understand the company’s capital requirements. Determine how much capital the company will
need, when the company will need that capital, how the company plans to raise
additional finance and what prospects the company has to generate cash from
operations.
Look at the company’s sustainability. If the management work for zero or low
salaries, assess how long potentially are they willing to forego salaries and
other opportunities.
Review the company’s corporate governance structure. Find out if the company is audited, if there
are checks and controls embedded in the cash management process, if the company
has transparent accounting and management information systems, how the company
makes day to day decisions and how the company makes longer term strategic
decisions.
Review the company’s disaster recovery plans. Determine how adequate they are and if there
are important flaws or gaps.
Review the company’s legal structure. Make sure the company is incorporated, in
good standing, a shareholder register is properly maintained updated and
verified transparently. Review the
Articles of Association. Understand your
rights as a shareholder, how important decisions are made and what shareholder
protections are present.
Review the legal environment the company operates in. Find out about key regulations and laws which
impact the company, how those regulations and laws might change and how the
company can adapt.
Consult with experts. Review
the potential investment with experience, educated angel investors. Find independent third parties who understand
the industry and the product and can offer insight and opinion. Discuss the investment with your personal
financial, legal and tax advisors.
Risk management
Once risks have been
assessed the task at hand is to decide how best to deal with them. The options are as follows:
De-select
Sometimes the best thing to
do is walk away. Each angel investment
can result in 100% loss of capital.
Successful angel investors have good returns in part because they find
good companies, but also because they are selective. They ask many questions, they have the benefit
of experience and lessons learned and the knowledge and understanding they have
gained to their selection process.
Control
the risk
Angel investors who take an
active role and work closely with their investee companies can mitigate many of
the risks stemming from core business issues.
One of the major reasons why angel investors can generate higher than
average returns is because they have relevant industry and business experience
they can draw on to add value to their investee companies. Active investors can mitigate risks across
the spectrum through their involvement with the investee companies. Here are some examples:
·
Generating sales leads
·
Identifying new customers and new market
segments
·
Working with management to design business plans
and strategies
·
Introducing new investors to the company
·
Overseeing corporate governance issues such as
audits, financial control systems, design and review of operating systems and
procedures
·
Benchmarking to industry competitors
·
Mentoring managers
·
Finding additional managerial talent or external
consultants
Delegate
investment selection to professionals
One of the major reasons why
angel groups and angel funds can be successful is that they have highly
specific knowledge experience and skills sets that are required in order to
make good angel investments. Their
value-added comes from the following activities:
·
Evaluation of companies, business plan,
management teams and business strategies
·
Creating synergies among their investee
companies
·
Sharing information, research and due diligence
with their professional networks
·
Negotiating deal terms
·
Monitoring the activities of the investee
companies
·
Identifying problems at the investee companies
and discussing solutions with management
·
Helping investee companies prepare for the
eventual exit
·
Introducing investee companies to new sources of
capital
·
Developing diversified portfolios of investments
in startup and early stage companies
Invest
in companies where key risks have been addressed
When evaluating companies to
investing, map or benchmark the characteristics of the investee companies
against a set of key risks. Set certain
criteria for investments you consider acceptable. Some criteria worth considering might be as
follows:
·
The company is already generating revenues
·
Company operates in fast growing market
·
Capital requirements are modest
·
Financing is ample to take the company to the
point where it generates free cash from operations
·
Management team is strong and is not overly
reliant on one or a few particular managers
·
The skill sets needed to run the company are not
highly specific
·
The company has a strong market position and a
unique service that is costly and difficult to replicate
·
Company has good corporate governance practices
and treats investors as valued partners
Select angel investments in the context of your
overall financial needs and circumstances.
Consider your risk tolerance not only in the present, but where it is
likely to be in the future. Invest
only what you can afford to lose and take into account the fact that your angel
investment might not be liquid when you will have strong need for liquidity.
Review the angel investments in light of FX fluctuations. Evaluate whether or not you need to hedge all
or part of your investment against adverse FX fluctuations.
Take time to exit into consideration. Select investments that are likely to
generate return on capital well before you expect you are likely to need that
money.
Diversify your angel portfolio. Take
into account that failure rate within angel portfolios may be high. Estimate the returns you can expect from
investments that are successful and estimate the failure rate you are likely to
experience. Research suggests that
failure rate among angel investments is as much as 50%. On the other hand, successes can result in
exits at multiples of 3X to 30X. Most
literature we have reviewed suggests that beyond 15 companies the benefits of
further diversification are marginal.
When building a portfolio, take into account how similar are the
businesses among the portfolio. Having
mix of companies that operate in a variety of industries, and sell a variety of
products is also important to generate benefits from diversification.
Diversify your overall portfolio. Angel investments by themselves do not
constitute a complete and diverse investment program. Ensure your financial portfolio has a mix of
assets that are appropriate for your financial situation.
Parting
thoughts
We recently produced a video overview about Symfonie Angel Ventures, which invests in startup and early stage companies. http://www.slideshare.net/msonenshine/symfonie-angel-fund-video-who-we-are-and-what-we-do
This discussion paper is
intended to provide a general framework for considering risks associated with
angel investing. The lists of risks and ways to evaluate and manage risk are
not exhaustive. Investors should not
rely solely on this discussion paper when making an investment decision. Investors should also consult with
independent legal, tax and financial
advisors before making any investment decision. . This paper was produced for publication 12 May 2014.
Investing in startup and early
stage companies (making angel investments) is considered suitable only for
sophisticated investors with the knowledge, willingness, experience necessary
to undertake such an investment and accordingly to bear the risks associated. Angel investing on its own should not be
considered a complete investment program and investors are strongly advised to
consider an angel investments the context of their overall portfolio
objectives, liquidity requirements and risk tolerance. There are no assurances
or guarantees of any return on investment.
Symfonie makes no guarantee or
representation that angel investing will be a successful investment strategy or
returns will exhibit low correlation with an investor's traditional securities
portfolio.
Questions? Comments? Our e-mail address is info@symfoniecapital.com.
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