Regional super funds are on the way to where?

Lord Mandelson is keen to get the economy moving again and is championing regional super funds - VC funds run by the regional development agencies.  Of course this appeals to a politician who wants to get big numbers into the headlines and can rely on the agencies to invest the money in a plausible way.

Chris Rowlands, a former director of private equity group 3i , may be wasting his time preparing a report on the financing of smaller, high growth companies as his boss is already making the decision by signing off one £125million fund proposed by OneNorthEast with the North West to follow soon.

Even the name gives it all away, very competent and very nice people thinking that by coming up with good, catch names they will be able to show the VC world the way to do it.

I used to work for 3i in the late 70’s and have the highest regard for all they have achieved.  A few years at 3i was essential training for the private equity world.  But when you look at 3i and the private equity world, they make their money by clever financing schemes such as Management Buy Outs and Ins which involve complex financial instruments and lots and lots of leverage and debt.

But that is not the financial structure used by the successful VCs of high technology companies.  They invest in equity and as Chris Dixon and Fred Wilson make clear in their blogs, clever financing does not a successful high technology company make.  In fact, using a business plan resource such as Equity Fingerprint, you can see that good companies have simple financial structures.

I hope that Chris Rowlands’ report will make it clear that if we want to build successful private equity companies then promote a better understanding of complex financial structures.  If you want to promote successful high tech companies, you need to get entrepreneurs working in clusters; provide greater tax incentives to encourage entrepreneurs to risk more of their money by investing in start-ups and protecting their capital gains from too much taxation.

The trouble is that the politicians do not have time to spare, they have an election in the next year; so let us invest in a few plausible ideas and talk big numbers.  One key feature of these companies is that the founders will have a very small shareholding and will be well paid.  Again very different from an entrepreneurial run company in which the founders will have a significant share of the company.  The best entrepreneurs will pay themselves as little as possible to stretch the resources between funding rounds.

I wonder if Chris Rowlands reads the blogs of Fred and Chris?  I could not find his own blog but perhaps he does not use social networks.  Can we comment on his work for the report?

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  1. From Identifying and categorizing startups « Startup Commons on 29 Sep 2009 at 12:58 pm

    […] Regional super funds are on the way to where? (cambridgecluster.com) […]

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