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Archive for July, 2009

Balance & Options (Increasing Optionality on Outcomes)

Posted by VenturePopulist On July - 20 - 2009

Balance & Options, DJ Quik, 2000

Private investments in venture and early-stage companies are characterized by their potential for positive asymmetrical outcomes (PAO). The risk of losing the entire investment is offset against the potential for high-multiple ROIs. But asymmetric outcomes refers to more than the non-linear relationship between risk and return…it also refers to the appeal of investments where multiple liquidity and exit outcomes are possible.

 

This is often referred to as optionality…current knowledge of the potential for multiple future outcomes.

 

 

According to his book, In an Uncertain World, Robert Rubin, the nine-figure alumni chairman of Citi, is said to have developed his appreciation of optionality in his prior days of risk arbitrage at Goldman. While practicing risk arbitrage, Rubin developed a penchant for optionality (keeping ones options open) and avoidance of a mindset that restricted decision-making to binary and zero-sum outcomes.

 

It is believed that Larry Summers ultimately coined the phrase “preserving optionality” back when he was deputy secretary of the treasury under Robert Rubin in the Clinton administration. It was meant to describe a strategy of keeping options open and fluid, before all of the uncertainties have been resolved in dynamic environments where there is a high likelihood for the emergence of new and material information.

 

The phrase is relevant in venture circles for investors, as well as, entrepreneurs.

 

Preserving Optionality for Investors and Entrepreneurs

 

For entrepreneurs, optionality in rapidly evolving scenarios (such as a start-up) means leveraging real-time data and experience before making important decisions that are either resource intensive or cannot be easily reverse…such as pursuing a market vertical, developing a new technology or application, embarking on a joint venture or contemplating multiple exit strategies.

 

In most instances these options were not conceivable at the outset of the venture because, at best, a start-up’s business plan is to an entrepreneur what a treatment is to a script writer…it’s simply a first draft. It is the actual, real-time development of the story line and its characters that ultimately determines the final draft of a movie script…or the path to monetization for a new business venture.

 

Investors and experienced entrepreneurs know this. I have rarely seen a startup that successfully monetized itself based upon the mission, objectives and milestones envisioned in its original business plan. That’s because time in the market is often more valuable than time to market with respect to improving the quality of the critical decisions that are of material consequence.

 

Technology consultant Sean Hull of the Heavyweight Internet Group notes this nuance…“preserving optionality is a philosophy that takes some getting used to. It involves having a sense of humor, and realizing our own human limitations.

 

Author-epistemologist-investor Nassim Taleb gets it as well. In Fooled by Randomness he characteristically opines “people overestimate their knowledge and underestimate the probability of their being wrong“. He suggests that by being ever aware of our limitations of prescience, and keeping our eyes and our options open, we can make better, more educated, and lower risk decisions. He is correct.

 

This implications and realities of preserving optionality, often positions entrepreneurs at odds with investors. The interests of optionality must be balanced.

 

For the entrepreneur, preserving optionality is an interest that frequently requires a balancing act against intrusive, non-strategic, no-value-add investors who view accountability and measurability as metrics preeminent to the benefits of prudent executive flexibility and strategic discretion.

 

On the other hand, the investor’s needs for optionality is particularly relevant today in light of the macro market malaise and minimal marquis exits. With venture-backed IPOs now more an exception, venture investors need to stipulate optionality with respect to cash-flow and exit rights as a contingency to their investment commitment.

 

Investors need to see visibility to alternative liquidity events such as dividend distributions or return of initial capital beyond the sale or merger of the company or its assets, or a less than likely IPO.

 

It is of no surprise that investors have a preference for positively-skewed outcomes and hold an aversion to negatively-skewed outcomes despite the fact that linear or variance-based risk measures generally weigh the outcomes equally.

 

Yet, investors seeking the potential for multiple and positive asymmetric outcomes on their commitments must also apply the measures of asymmetry and optionality to their deal diligence and terms. More than ever, investors should require visibility on multiple paths to liquidity. The investor has the responsibility to appropriately balance their interest in ROI with the survival or expansion cash-flow needs of the portfolio company.

 

Why so many “professional” investors are so passive on this issue is puzzling.

 

Investors and entrepreneurs alike both benefit from preserving optionality and having the pre-negotiated discretion to pursue a prudent Plan B.

 

We will discuss those some of those options in upcoming posts.

 

 

Album:   Balance & Options, DJ Quik, 2000

Popularity: 15% [?]

Boom Boom PAO (Shift Your Focus Towards High Kurtosis)

Posted by VenturePopulist On July - 11 - 2009

Boom Boom Pow, Black Eyed Peas, 2009Our recent proclamations that “MPT failed” have elicited a distinctively binary response from wealth managers and investment advisors. I have both the commendatory and the castigating emails and comment board posts that prove it.

 

While many IAs responded enthusiastically, a seemingly larger pool of advisors continue to cling desperately to their discredited diversification dogmas hoping that investors may not have noticed the failure of their advisor’s mantras and models even as last week’s front page WSJ article (“Failure of Fail-Safe Strategy Sends Investors Scrambling”) cited more examples of prominent institutions who who likewise believe that prevailing “asset-allocation strategies are fundamentally flawed”.

 

Last month in this column I introduced Hybrid Portfolio Theory (HPT) as an alternative to Modern Portfolio Theory. HPT is comprised of two distinct (hybrid) sub-portfolios; the larger (say, 75%) with the primary objectives of insuring safety of principal, liquidity and income by way of allocations to money markets, CDs, municipal and government bonds, while the smaller (25%) portfolio is opportunistically allocated to make investments that have a positive asymmetric outcome (PAO) profile.

 

In a recent Investment Advisor Magazine-sponsored webinar I defined PAO opportunities as those characterized by positively-skewed risk/reward ratios that can be achieved via investments such as venture capital, private equity, direct (angel) private investment in start-ups and emerging private and operating cash-flow businesses, private real estate, private debt, franchises, as well as, publicly-traded emerging growth companies, (long volatility) option strategies and other highly-specialized investment strategies perhaps employed by some hedge funds, managed futures and market-timers.

 

This definition implies a potentially broad constituent universe that allows the investor considerable discretion in identifying PAO opportunities in the HPT sub-portfolio mandated to pursue capital appreciation. Advisor practitioners seeking to implement HPT should exercise such discretion based upon a number of factors, such as their access, due diligence skills and core beliefs with respect to the viability of certain PAO asset-classes, strategies or products. As the moniker Venture Populist implies, my PAO allocations favor private investment in private venture due to the decisive historical performance of venture capital and private equity as an asset class and its proven role of being the greatest and most sustainable source of private wealth.

 

But the beauty of HPT lies in its adaptability as each investor will define their PAO universe according to their own beliefs, biases, professional skills, access to product  and deal flow…as long as those investments are truly characterized by an empirical and quantifiable positively-skewed risk/reward ratio.

 

Private investments in venture and early-stage companies are unmistakable asymmetric upside candidates as they are often vulnerable to a 100% loss but may also return three to twenty times on capital. Publicly-traded emerging growth companies are occasionally capable of delivering outsized (Lynch’s “10-bagger”) returns, as well.

 

But, what about managed futures and market-timers? The manufacturers, marketers and distributers of these so-called “absolute return” products clearly position them as effective portfolio diversifiers, citing their low correlation to long-only assets during Gaussian good times, but does anyone still fall for that line in light of correlations invariably coalescing amidst ever more frequent black swan drills?

 

Fact is, quantitative diligence reveals most managed futures and market-timers employ zero-sum game strategies with distinctively binary and symmetrical outcomes. They can lose or gain the same amount on each trade. Even if their quantitative models impose disciplined (per trade) stop-loss provisions the aggregate sum of losing trades can equal (or exceed) the aggregate of the winners….hardly asymmetric.

 

MPT would not have failed so miserably if the concept of diversification was not diluted and polluted by product pushers and manipulative mutual fund marketers. Achieving true diversification requires a higher standard. Amidst the new normal and an elusive equity premium, capital appreciation should be pursued via diversified portfolios defined by their breadth of investments with the potential for positive asymmetrical outcomes.

 

 

Album:   Boom Boom Pow, Black Eyed Peas, 2009

Popularity: 26% [?]