Title: A.
1 First Regional SME Finance Conference Amman
February 24 26, 2008
Risk Capital Finance for SMEs Tom
Gibson smethink.org
2Principal Points
- Private equity is only appropriate for large
investments and favors ICT, natural resources,
and financial services. - The SME financing gap has caused an SME growth
gap which can only be closed by new sources of
risk capital. - Both risk and reward need to be adjusted in SME
risk capital strategies through - specialized, innovative, entrepreneurial
investment intermediaries, and - public-private partnerships to draw investment to
SME risk capital.
3Why private equity and venture capital cant fit
most SMEs.
- The issues
- exits
- information
- alignment
4SME Risk Capital Major Obstacles to PE / VC
- Information deficits
- asymmetry
- poor record-keeping
- absence of credit bureaus
- absence of collateral registries
- absence of comparable data
- Exit realities
- illiquidity / low turnover of stock exchanges
- low potential for mergers and acquisitions
- difficulty of financing MBOs (buy-backs)
- lack of motivation to sell (family/life-style
businesses)
5SME Risk Capital Major Obstacles to PE / VC
- Misalignments of interests
- Funds want high SMEs dont want to
- dividends. pay high taxes.
- Funds want high SMEs want
a low - capital gains.
buy-back price.
180
180
6Incentives to cook the books
The WorldCom Method of accounting Cook a
soufflé!
hide expenses profits up
The SME Method of accounting Cook
a crêpe!
hide income profits down
7Risk Capital Financing for SMEs Fourth Door
Funds
8Why SMEs?
Where do large firms come from? How does a
country best diversify its economy? Which group
of businesses, by size and degree of development,
has the greatest incentive to define and insist
on policy reforms and accountable, transparent
government?
9SMEs Who are they?
- Typically
- fruit processors
- spare parts suppliers
- furniture manufacturers
- commercial printers
- computer skills trainers
- wholesale bakers
- door and window manufacturers
- internet service providers
- poultry processors
- fast food franchisors (local)
- tour organizers
- industrial cleaners
10SMEs Who are they?
- Typically
- 10 to 150 employees
- formally registered, generally compliant
- 250,000 to 2.5 million annual turnover
- owner-managed/family-managed
- most often life-style business
- financing growth through cashflows
- financed at birth by family, friends,
secured loan of 25-50K - often lack training and financial discipline
- require 100 K to 1M for expansion
11Financing SMEs Current Market Options
SMEs looking for 100,000 to 1,000,000
Leasing Commercial
Private Equity
Companies Banks
Venture Capital
?
- high interest
- high fees
- short-term
- high collateral
- need high liquidity
- high base cost
- high fees
- working capital?
- want 3rd-party
- exit potential
- require high
- returns
- do few deals
12SME Risk Capital Adjusting Risk Adjustment
Risk adjusted returns on SME risk capital
market return on fully secured corporate
financing (opportunity cost)
10 adjustment for size and SME sector
perceptions 5 adjustment for less than 100
collateral 10 adjustment
for political/market vulnerability
5 adjustment for difficulties in exiting
10
40 management fee and fund expenses
5 Investors required IRR (hurdle
rate) 45
13Is 45 IRR realistic?
14Fourth Door Funds Adjusting Risk Adjustment
Reduced risk at the investee level.
Improved returns at the investor level.
15Fourth Door Funds
Reducing risk at the investee level.
- royalty-based (sales-based) finance
- investment in expansions (not-start-ups)
- minimal exposures in equity
- more investment staff at lower cost
- grant-based technical assistance (TA
Facilities)
16Fourth Door Funds
Reduced risk at the investee level.
Improved returns at the investor level.
17Fourth Door Funds
Improving returns at the investor level.
- aligning instruments and returns
- for diverse investors with
- diverse objectives
-
- providing government incentives
- to invest
18Fourth Door Funds
Aligning instruments and returns for diverse
investors with diverse objectives
Investor objectives (examples)
IRR
45 /- 0
- - high risk/high financial yield only
- - moderate risk/modest yield, plus market
knowledge - - low risk/low yield, plus govt./public relations
- - lowest risk/lowest yield, plus developmental
objectives - philanthropy
- Instruments (examples)
- - pure common equity shares
- equity shares with capped yield and preferences
- low-interest debt with equity kicker
- low interest debt (leveraged fund)
- grants for capital for technical assistance
Risk
high low
19Fourth Door Funds
Providing government incentives to invest
- tax incentives (Trinidad and Tobago, U.S.
CDFIs) - loss insurance (U.S-OPIC)
- non-voting equity (Israel-Yozma Program)
- co-investment ((France, Germany)
- leveraged funds (Australia-IIFs, U.S.-SBICs
20Fourth Door Funds
Providing legal and regulatory incentives to
invest
- Funds able to operate as private companies with
tax neutrality (particular need for limited
partnerships), not regulated as banks or NBFIs. - No restrictions on minority shareholder rights
(to much or too little power). - No restrictions on, or lack of provision for,
separate classes of shares with rights agreed by
investee and investors. - No restrictions on rights to dismiss management
for cause. - No restrictions on rights to sell minority shares
as agreed between investor and investee.
21 Fourth Door Funds
Features for SME Risk Capital
- mid- to long-term financing
- cashflow-based financing with less
- than 100 collateral coverage
- returns linked to SMEs performance,
- de-linked from market interest rates
- not dependent upon third-party exits from equity
- (MA and IPOs) or high capital gains from
MBOs - streamlined, replicable transaction structures
- operated by people with local business skills as
opposed - to imported investment banking skills
- direct hands-on technical and management
assistance - diverse investors with diverse motives and
diverse returns - government-sponsored incentives to invest
22Fourth Door Funds
Reduced risk at the investee level.
Improved returns at the investor level.
23Shareholder Loan Funds
- Imposes specific investment methodology,
combining - - minority equity participation
- - low-interest loan
- - percentage of sales (royalties)
- All investments must have equity component.
- 75 - 90 of investment must be as
shareholder loan. - All loans must include royalty rights in
addition - to interest.
-
24Shareholder Loan Funds
- Why equity?
- Voting rights and/or participation in
decisions. - Reduce debt burden in early phase of
expansion. - Establish close partnership.
- Freedom from regulation as a lending
institution.
25Shareholder Loan Example
Business assumptions pre-investment
equity 100,000 total investment
required 300,000 post-investment
sales (Year 1) 250,000 average
growth p/a 25 Investment
Structure Equity
50,000 for 33 of shares dividends
paid none exit
at pre-determined multiple of purchase
price or sales Shareholder Loan
250,000 interest prime minus /- 2
points royalty 3 of gross sales term
5 years, w/1-year grace on
principal
26Shareholder Loan Terms
- - invest for new shares only
- minimum 26, maximum 49 ownership
- no dividends paid
- tag-along rights
- no less than 3 years, no greater than 6 years
- normally below prime, no greater than
- prime
- no less than 1 of sales, no greater than 5
- based on greater of projected or actual sales
- no less than 25 in pledges of business
- and personal assets pledges, plus pledge of
- shares, but no requirement for 100 coverage
Equity Investment Term of Loan Interest
Rate Royalty Percentage Collateral
Requirement
27Shareholder Loan Funds
- 80 exposure in debt means less risk.
- Less pressure on exits means more easily
managed by local - talent (most often local bankers who are
tinkerers). - Current income from interest and royalties
means early - benchmarks, reduced risk.
- Current income means investments easier to
monitor by - management.
- Current income means projections more firm
and portfolio - easier to monitor by investors.
- Less pressure on exits means more time on
Investees. - Eliminates arguments over earnings .
-
28Shareholder Loan Targets
- SMEs
- lacking other financing options
- in significant expansion situations
- with high cashflow and sales growth
- low net worth
- independent from groups
- dependent on viability for livlihood
- hiring key positions from outside the family
- managed by entrepreneurs focused on sales
- open to non-financial added value
29Shareholder Loan and TA
- assistance in establishing financial controls
- strategic planning
- cost accounting and pricing
- development of market plans
- identification of appropriate outside experts
- negotiation of terms of sale and purchasing
agreements - negotiation of licensing agreements
- identification of lenders and loan
negotiations - identification of new business support
technologies - board selection and corporate governance
- preparation of product catalogues and trade
fair - presentations
- etc.
-
30Principal Points
- Private equity is only appropriate for large
investments and favors ICT, natural resources,
and financial services. - The SME financing gap has caused an SME growth
gap which can only be closed by new sources of
risk capital. - Both risk and reward need to be adjusted in SME
risk capital strategies through - specialized, innovative, entrepreneurial
investment intermediaries, and - public-private partnerships to draw investment to
SME risk capital.
31tgibson_at_smethink.org
32 Investment Size and Stage
m 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Investment Funds
Strategic Investor
International V.C.
Irish V.C.s
Stage
Idea Seed Early
Development Exit