Monday, April 21, 2008

VC fundings down...tied to economic recession?

Was having pleasant cup of joe reading the paper (yes once in awhile I still like the "print dinosaur") when I read the article on slowing VC fundings in 1q 2008. Both PWC and E&Y do a great job covering the field.

On the same page or close to it, was an article on recession and unemployment rising. So is there a link? Who is the tail and who is the dog? (I will skip the easy analogy of an ass). Is there correlation between the two and what is the lag effect, if any?

My 2 cents...a recession, oil at a gazillion dollars a barrel and gas at $4 a gallon does not make people feel good. Quick poll, who has gone over $100 on an SUV fill-up? Let me start the list, but I digress.

If you were a VC, why would you deploy risk capital - particularly early stage - in a time of upcoming economic uncertainty? For the most part, the answer is - you wouldn't. You'd cherry pick your opportunities and be conservative and ride out the storm. I think this is much truer in the IT world than in biomedical, as biomedical sectors are influenced more by reimbursement, government, legal and market issues than consumer spending. (Note: Botox has passed milk in the family home and happy hours in the single home on the list of “critical needs,” so that isn’t really a discretionary spend).

Hence as VCs take a breather and raise more money/new funds as many are now doing, entrepreneurs should keep plugging away, increase business value and be realistic that although there is a lot of money out there, it might stay “out there” for awhile. Focus on capital efficiency and position for a stronger 2009.

Thoughts?

No comments: