AAA Sovereign wealth funds and technology investment

Sovereign wealth funds and technology investment

Introduction

The past three years have seen Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWF) capturing headlines for high-profile investments in innovative technology businesses. The Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia may have made the most noise in 2016 with its attention-grabbing $3.5 billion Uber stake and, more recently, a collaboration with Softbank on a “$100 billion” tech-focused venture capital fund. Yet such announcements are merely the tip of the iceberg.

The Sovereign Wealth Center, for instance, has recorded 47 direct TMT deals by SWFs in 2015 and 2016, in comparison with 93 for the entire decade 2003-2014. In addition, the data reveals a number of relevant investments classified under healthcare. While investments via external asset managers are not similarly tracked, their research alone would appear to indicate a sharp uptick in activity, focused largely on consumer technology and – to a somewhat lesser extent – alternative energy and biotechnology.

In this paper, we ask whether this apparent increase is indicative of a genuine shift in SWF allocations. We also explore the strategies that they are currently pursuing in an opaque, hard-to-access and now increasingly frothy sector.

Part 1: Technology Investment Insights from Sovereign Wealth Funds (p.3) examines the different methods being employed by institutions around the world to break down doors in Silicon Valley, develop direct investment expertise and capitalise on their unique geographical or investment advantages. Data and front-line insights from more than a dozen senior SWF officials reveal how and why the vast majority have increased their allocations to technology investments during the past five years, ranging from early to growth stage and beyond, despite the endemic challenges of small scale and big complexity. Other examples from the world of pension funds and university endowments may also prove instructive.

In Part 2: The Case for Innovation Investing – A Perspective from Oman (p.9), Hamid Hamirani sets out the economic case that can lead sovereign wealth funds to invest a greater portion of their assets in technology businesses. The sector has become particularly compelling, he argues, in a climate where economic growth remains weak despite loose monetary and fiscal policies. Hamirani’s role in Oman’s Ministry of Finance involves oversight of the State General Reserve Fund and the Oman Investment Fund, both of which have recently become more involved in this space. In August 2016, OIF participated in Cambridge Innovation Capital’s latest £75 million fundraising round alongside the likes of Woodford Investment Management. In September and October, SGRF and OIF respectively announced the launch of their own venture capital funds with local development featuring as a key priority.

Finally, in Part 3: “Innovation Investing” – A New User’s Guide (p.13), Professor Jerome Engel of UC Berkeley urges SWF investors to prioritise education during their first decade in this sector, alongside the more traditional objectives of financial return and – in some cases – local strategic benefit. A leading academic figure long-recognised for his work on venture capital and the commercialisation of university research, Engel also draws comparisons between sovereign wealth funds and the world of corporate venture capital, highlighting the potential benefits of a more holistic approach.

Part One

Technology Investment Insights from Sovereign Wealth Funds

Interviews with senior officials from thirteen SWFs revealed that more than 80% have increased allocations to technology investments during the past five years, whether through direct stakes or external asset managers.

These investors – predominantly large, globally oriented entities with an average AuM well over $100 billion – have adopted a range of strategies but a number of common attractions and priorities are evident:

  • Perceived higher growth potential;
  • Diversification from traditional investments towards idiosyncratic growth drivers;
  • A window into how key technological developments will affect the wider portfolio.

Two roads converged

On a very broad level, the shift can be attributed to the confluence of two prevailing trends. The first is that many of these investors, like their large pension fund counterparts globally, have dedicated increasing proportions of their portfolios to unlisted assets including private equity since the global financial crisis. Much of this movement can be attributed to poor returns and weak expectations in public markets, as well as the desire for better diversification and risk management.

The second is that technology firms have themselves become increasingly reluctant to list on stock exchanges, preferring repeated rounds of private fundraising to the vagaries of an IPO and life as a listed company. Only 16 US-based venture-backed tech companies went public in 2015 and 14 have done so far this year, down from 30 in 2014 and far below the annual average of 49 since 1980.

These two developments are, of course, related. Companies have been able to pursue a private path in large part because of the increased willingness of investors to hold their shares privately rather than pushing towards listing. A secondary market has evolved and expanded to support this appetite.

Sovereign Wealth Fund: While definitions vary widely, these interviews focused exclusively on government-owned investment entities tasked with maximising long-term intergenerational savings. Stabilisation funds, development funds, central bank reserves and funds with explicit pension liabilities were not included. Technology investment is a highly relevant theme among development funds but strategies can be difficult to clarify and compare with global counterparts. Meanwhile, the theme is far less relevant among stabilisation funds due to the illiquid nature of preferred access points. All interviews were conducted anonymously in order to respect confidentiality requirements. Yet we hope that establishing restrictive criteria makes the findings easier to interpret. A list of relevant sovereign wealth funds is included in the Appendix.

For these private companies, a SWF may even be preferable to other types of investor, such as the private equity or venture capital vehicle in need of a three-, five- or seven-year exit or – still worse – the poorly aligned mutual fund.

This marriage of interests has not perhaps been tested fully since 2009, although there are some signs that private fundraising in the tech sector has slowed, with 355 late-stage deals in the third quarter according to the National Venture Capital Association. We have yet to see the end of an investment cycle which would hit valuations, despite some wavering in early 2016 when the likes of Jawbone took significant markdowns. The Kuwait Investment Authority, incidentally, stepped in to provide financing in that particular case, although only time will tell whether the acquired stake really did represent good value.

Not all large institutional investors appreciate these synchronous trends among firms that wish to remain private and investors happy to hold private stakes. Earlier this year Oeyvind Schande, CIO of Norges Bank Investment Management (manager of the Government Pension Fund Global), a SWF prohibited from making direct or indirect private equity investments, expressed frustration that so few high-growth companies are now choosing to list on stock exchanges. In an interview with Reuters he cited Snapchat, Airbnb, Uber and Pinterest, saying: “those four alone have a combined market value of more than [$120 billion]. It’s a market that we can’t invest in.” He called on governments in developed countries to do more to reverse the two-decade-long decline in listings.

Investment method

Half of the Sovereign Wealth Funds interviewed invest in technology businesses both through external asset managers (primarily venture capital funds) and via direct investments, with a minority doing either one or the other.

In a handful of cases the SWF has even founded or seeded its own VC entity, either through partnership with an external firm, as  exemplified by the new PIF/Softbank initiative, or – in the style of OMERS Ventures – as a wholly owned subsidiary. New models have also emerged from the pension fund and endowment communities: PGGM, ATP and the University of California Board of Regents have all made widely-publicised developments in this sector.

To some extent, direct and indirect investments are treated as complementary strategies by the SWFs interviewed for this study. For instance, early-stage investments are almost entirely conducted through external venture capital managers while, for the most part, SWF direct investments focus on growth-stage. (Note: a list of deals from the Sovereign Wealth Center can be found in the appendix.) Conversely, direct early-stage financing is relatively rare and only two SWFs mentioned using specific technology-focused private equity managers for growth-stage investments, although others do have such exposure through broader multi-sector PE managers.

External approaches can complement internally managed strategies in a variety of other ways such as improving deal-flow; educating the internal team while building a direct investment capability and providing co-investments. Indeed, three officials expressed a clear preference for building up the direct investment strategy at the expense of fund investments over time.

For the majority of sovereign wealth funds, both direct and indirect investments were spread globally with a bias towards the United States in venture capital and, in the case of directs, an additional tendency to overweight the investor’s local region. “In the U.S. we’ve worked more through the funds, whereas in Asia – China, India – we’ve worked more with the builders,” explained one SWF. “We are willing to be as dynamic and creative in the U.S. as we have been in Asia but the market in the U.S. does savour the brand name funds. We plan to step out from behind the curtain a bit more.”

Multiple institutions including GIC, Temasek and Khazanah Nasional have established their own offices on the West Coast in order to develop the relationships and resources that are vital to obtaining access in the most competitive tech hunting ground in the world.

The subject of gaining appropriate access to the U.S. tech market is a challenging and controversial one. New investors do not necessarily feel welcome in a hard-to-crack and potentially overheated cottage industry, where top quartile firms already have a queue of willing clients stretching out of the door. Even if the industry receives sovereign funds with open arms, how can large investors achieve appropriate scale? More critically, does VC performance net of fees really make sense on a risk-adjusted basis?

Not everyone thinks so, as is demonstrated by the case study below, featuring one SWF that is trying to leverage its own distinctive advantages in less oversubscribed parts of the market rather than playing on someone else’s pitch.

Indeed it was interesting to note the extent to which the mature West Coast industry does still dominate conversations, followed by the East Coast in the case of life sciences and – to an increasing extent – the UK.

Those that are taking on the challenge of U.S. venture capital report widely differing degrees of satisfaction with the access they’ve managed to gain so far. Interestingly, the very fact of being a sovereign wealth fund can prove a positive asset in this endeavour. More than a third of interviewees indicated – without being prompted – that their regional strategic position had assisted them in gaining entry to top tier managers, citing examples where the involvement of a state investor could prove strategically useful to  GPs and their investee companies.

“Most of the help we provide [to investee firms] is related to cross-border value add,” said one interviewee.” We go to extreme lengths. But,” he added,” I am deeply concerned about how we can enhance this. There are far too many alternatives – others that can give that help now… We need to heighten our competitive advantages. In 2009 we had an immense competitive advantage.”

Cross-border value-add can work both ways: investee companies in the SWF’s local region can benefit from the investor’s U.S. network, just as U.S. investees can benefit from the SWF’s regional relationships and influence.

Leveraging disruption: the wider portfolio

In describing their technology investment strategy and rationale, several SWFs mentioned that insights gleaned from private market technology investment benefit their wider portfolio. In theory, a window to innovative industry-changing technologies may allow investors to take advantage of instances when disruption should affect particular listed equities, infrastructure, real estate and more.

“We’re using what we’re seeing in the tech investing portfolio to make judgement calls on some of our more traditional investments,” said one, who cited changes in the fund’s power sector investments as a result of foreseen developments in energy generation, distribution and storage that they were poised to understand at an early stage thanks to the private equity team.

Yet when it comes to a holistic strategy there’s a world of difference between talking the talk and walking the walk. “We have had trouble on the translation – translating insights into the public markets,” said one private market-focused official. “I’ve gone to the public markets team and recommended stocks based on what I know about tech disruption and they haven’t picked up on it, or haven’t invested enough in it. In 2009 we should have done a far bigger bet on Amazon – we had studied it extensively and had no doubt. It would have been one of the best investments the SWF had ever made.” Major disruptions do not come up often, he explains, so it is important to be both able and willing to take concentrated bets. “I’m not finding ten amazing realities in a cycle. When they come up you need to take a big position to make it worthwhile.”

That investor is now introducing a new, confidential initiative that will essentially enable staff trained in the private markets team not just to recommend stocks but to invest in listed equities themselves as part of a new unit specifically incarnated for the purpose of exploiting disruption. For their colleagues in the public markets team, inaction will no longer be the career-risk-free strategy.

Local interests

Asked anonymously whether local developmental or strategic considerations influence their technology investments, nearly 20 percent of interviewees acknowledged that such factors play a “significant” role in their and a further quarter acknowledge “some/minor” relevance.

In part, this is because the old lines between globally-oriented “sovereign wealth funds,” primarily established to avert the inflationary Dutch disease and provide important intergenerational savings, and domestically-oriented “sovereign development funds” concerned with a pure local agenda have become increasingly blurred.

Mumtalakat in Bahrain and Ireland’s National Pension Reserve Fund (now the Irish Strategic Investment Fund) have morphed from international allocators to domestic strategic investors. The Oman State General Reserve Fund – a globally oriented SWF that now looks increasingly towards local development – provides another interesting example in this vein. From the other direction, Khazanah Nasional in Malaysia has evolved from a state holding company to a global investment force, retaining a strategic angle in cases where it is plausible. New entities such as the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority have been incarnated with separate sub-units that target different missions.

The twin driving forces of domestic pressure to enhance local growth in troubled economic times and increasingly meagre international investment prospects influence these shifts.

As a result, while this particular survey was aimed at internationally-oriented SWFs and excluded specific development funds, it is almost impossible to be entirely strict in this classification.

That being said, more than half of SWFs – 55% – said that local strategic or development considerations played “no role” at all. This includes the vast majority of the largest (>$100bn) entities. “To the outside world it may look as if some of our investments are being done for local strategic interests but that is not the case,” said one official, referencing examples where the SWF has invested in the regional market.

As Douglas Hansen-Luke, Chairman of Future Planet Capital, points out above, double bottom-line considerations are far from being a topic specific to sovereign funds, particularly given the rising importance of ESG and ‘impact’ considerations among the international pension fund community. His firm, which is focused on ‘innovation investing,’ has worked with Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh and Tsinghua to invest $100m on behalf of SWFs and venture funds.

Beware the bandwagon

Whilst the majority of SWFs have increased their investments in the technology sector, nearly half of the surveyed group expressed concerns about an overheating sphere  inflated by excessive investor demand.

Writing in 2015, Victoria Barbary – now Director at the International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds – expressed concerns that SWFs were helping to push prices in consumer technology and biotech to unsustainable levels. Her words are well worth revisiting:

“[There are] three potential bubbles into which state-owned investors have poured cash: consumer technology, healthcare/biotech and real estate/infrastructure. The level of dealmaking in the consumer technology sector – particularly in the U.S. and Asia – is flirting with dotcom-era levels and SWFs have been in the thick of it. Whether it is the QIA backing car-hailing app Uber Technologies at a $45 billion valuation, GIC supporting India’s rival to Amazon.com (Flipkart) twice in 2014, at a valuation of 7bn in July and 11bn in December, or Temasek Holdings pouring money into Chinese firms like car-hailing app Didi Dache or online restaurant review service Dianping.com, SWFs now see consumer technology as a sector in which they want to play. But with technology companies seeking to avoid a replay of the 2000 dotcom bubble and shunning public listings, whether these investments will prove to have been unwisely overpriced won’t be known for years. Some have already made a killing. ADIC invested in WhatsApp in 2013, reaping a mighty return when Facebook bought the company in 2014.”

Whatever the precise approaches that sovereign wealth funds select in this space going forwards, institutional commitment to  a very long-term strategy – rather than “jumping on the bandwagon” – will no doubt be key to eventual success.



 

Part Two

The Case for Innovation Investing by SWFs: A Perspective from Oman

Hamid H. Hamirani is Senior Advisor to the Minister of Finance of Oman, Member of the Investment Committee for the Oman Investment Fund, Visiting Scholar at Stanford University and an Advisory Committee Member for Future Planet Capital. He writes: “Investors today inhabit an asset bubble environment infected with excessive debt. It is incumbent upon us to seek innovative answers.”

A world of low risk-adjusted returns

According to many leading investment management firms and analysts, none of the major listed asset classes are likely to generate anywhere near 6.5% – the long-term U.S. equity rate of return – over the next decade.

GMO, for instance, predicted in July 2016 that U.S. large cap equity returns over the next seven years – adjusted for inflation – will be negative 2.7% per annum, with international large cap expected to produce around 1.4%. Their forecast for non-U.S. fixed income, hedged back into the U.S. dollar, is even worse at -4%. If they are right, any kind of passive or semi-passive asset allocation strategy can expect real returns of approximately zero during this period.

Expansionary fiscal and loose monetary policies have not contributed to growth.

The current phase of GDP expansion is the fourth-longest such period since 1954. It is also the weakest. Since 1950, the average annual GDP growth rate during periods of economic recovery has been 4.3%. Since the Great Recession ending in the third quarter of 2009, that figure has averaged 2.1%. In other words, the economy has grown a mere 16% during seven years of so-called recovery (Crestmont Research, July 2016).

The IMF, World Bank, and BIS, have all recently revised their global forecasts downwards. Massive and unprecedented accumulation of debt in some of the large economic blocks, even at negative interest rates, has failed to generate the required results. Today, developed economies are in an interest rate trap. How can they raise rates when such rises would increase debt servicing costs, eating up a major part of government revenues and further hampering the economy?

Japan has employed ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy), QE (Quantitative Easing) and more recently NIRP (Negative Interest Rate Policy). Yet its growth rate has slipped to 0.6% since Shinzo Abe came to power in 2012, one third lower than the 0.9% average annual rate over the preceding 22 years, according to Stephen Roach of Project Syndicate (September 2016). This clearly suggests that extraordinary monetary stimulus has failed to generate get the economy moving.

As Roach observes, the same is true in the United States where growth since Q3 2009 has been 2.1%p.a., a far cry from the 4% average in comparable previous periods of economic recovery. The FED claims that monetary easing has been a clear success, citing a fall in unemployment from 10% to 4.9%. Yet the statistics suggest a major productivity slowdown that raises serious concerns about America’s long term economic potential amid an eventual build-up of cost and inflationary pressures.

Acceptance is gradually emerging of the limits of monetary policy and, as a result, the emphasis has recently shifted towards the easing of fiscal policy. Yet fiscal policy can only go so far, especially under the weight of a record $152 trillion in global non-financial debt, as calculated by the International Monetary Fund.

There is now an increasing consensus that the only conceivable path to growth lies in increasing productivity, perhaps through technological innovation.

GCC perspective

Fiscal policy may be a less effective tool to drive growth in emerging and low income countries than in advanced economies. A literature review by Batini et el. (2014) emphasised that fiscal multipliers are significantly lower in the former due to factors such as inefficiency in government spending and greater leakage through imports in smaller, more open economies. Short-term spending multipliers in emerging markets were found to be between 0.2 and 0.5; in advanced economies the figures ranged from 0.6 to 1.4.

There are three components that contribute towards GDP in a classic framework: labour, capital and productivity. According to IMF, non-oil growth in the GCC countries has been mainly driven by capital and labour accumulation rather than productivity. This explains the falling GDP in GCC countries since the beginning of the oil price decline in mid-2014.

Indeed, one of the IMF’s key recommendations for GCC countries is to introduce structural reforms fostering technological innovation as a means to enhance productivity.

A new wave of technology-driven growth?

In past decades, phases of economic expansion and investment returns have, it has been argued, been connected with productivity increases driven by major technological advancement, as illustrated in the chart below.

Technological innovation and equity markets

Today, the digital economy – with its smartphones and social media – is changing the way that economic activities are organised. In his book ‘The Sharing Economy’, Arun Sundararajan, writes that the merging of technologies:

  • Is changing the distribution model, shifting from a single or few suppliers to crowd providers like Uber and AirBNB.
  • Is enabling users to monetise their assets (cars, houses, household equipment) and increasing the capacity of utilisation. There are around 80 million power drills, each used on average for only 13 minutes over a lifetime. Cars spend most of time parked, doing nothing. Spare rooms stay empty.
  • Is providing new sources of finance, with crowd funding turning individuals into tiny Venture Capitalists.

Yet the development of the digital economy is not necessarily captured by GDP statistics. Traditional employment figures, for instance, do not include the millions of micro entrepreneurs. The actual size of the digital sector in GDP figures has remained static, even while intangible assets on UK and US company balance sheets have increased by three times the rate of tangible assets, according to a study for SAS Institute in 2013.

Information product, as American economist Paul Romer argues, is different from physical product: once the expense of creating a new set of instructions has been incurred, they can be used over and over again with zero marginal cost.

Mainstream economists assume that markets promote perfect competition and that imperfections such as monopolies, patents, trade unions, and price fixing cartels are always temporary. However once the economy is composed of shareable information goods, imperfect competition becomes the norm. There should be opportunities to arbitrage such inefficiencies for investment gains.

The case study of London, outlined above, represents a particularly useful model for the Arab world in an era of fiscal consolidation. While government spending on the digital economy in GCC countries is fairly low, the video consumption per capita on YouTube and Facebook is the highest in the world. The population is young, with 70% aged under 30. Smartphone penetration statistics are among the highest globally and there has been widespread adoption of social media platforms such as Twitter, Snapchat and Instagram.

Investing in innovation

According to Cambridge Associates, U.S. venture capital investments have performed better than private equity and listed equities, although such data is hard to rely on given factors such as survivor bias and capital weighting.

I believe that investing in technology in the private markets represents an opportunity to generate improved investment returns and, from an economist’s perspective, to enhance economic productivity. I also believe that such investments are relatively more insulated from central bank policy decisions than, for example, listed equities.

Sovereign funds in the GCC can consider a two-pronged approach, making investments and assisting firms in working with Arab markets, such as acquiring rights to bring technical know-how or distribution to the region. Sovereign wealth funds in Asia have assisted companies with access to China, for instance, as part of their international technology investing strategy. We can look to such examples. In Oman we have already seen notable examples of investments blending international approach with domestic strategy, such as in the case of Glasspoint.

Technology investment in general, and venture capital in particular, certainly bring challenges. The rate of failure is high, later stage financing is still scarce and the ecosystem is developing. Conventional investment structures often do not provide appropriate alignment between investor and manager. However new modus operandi are evolving.

Oxford Science Innovation, for example, has a phenomenally interesting new model. Operating in partnership with Oxford University, this manager provides investment assessment and lifetime financing to research originating from the University in return for a certain percentage of free equity, even where OSI has chosen not to invest. Investors such as Google Ventures and Sequoia have already invested in their first $500m fund.

Both of Oman’s sovereign wealth funds have become more heavily involved in this sector, internationally and at home, during the past few months. In August 2016, OIF participated in Cambridge Innovation Capital’s latest £75 million fundraising round alongside the likes of Woodford Investment Management. The following month, the State General Reserve Fund announced plans to establish a domestic venture capital fund, in which it will hold a 60 percent stake. Most recently, in late October, OIF launched the $200m Oman Technology Fund in partnership with three international venture capital firms.

This theme is a key political and developmental priority for the sultanate, as well as an investment priority for its sovereign wealth funds. Speaking with the press, Minister of Commerce and Industry HE Dr. Ali Bin Masoud Al Sunaidy said of the OTF initiative: “This [the internet of things’ is going to be a big challenge for us. Either we become part of that game and create jobs and profit out of it, or we become consumers and buyers. And I think this fund changes the equation by not restricting the country to the receiving side.”

 

Part Three

“Innovation Investing” – A New User’s Guide

Professor Jerome Engel is a Senior Fellow at University of California, Berkeley (Founding Executive Director Emeritus – Lester Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation; Faculty Member – Center for Executive Education), Founding General Partner of Monitor Ventures, Advisory Committee Member of Future Planet Capital, to name but a few of his affiliations. He writes: Sovereign Wealth Funds should prioritise a steep learning curve when entering the “innovation” sector.

The marketplace for ‘innovation’ – the commercialisation of new research and technology – is complex, opaque and, by its very definition, risky and inefficient. This challenge is exacerbated when one seeks to take advantage of the phenomenal financial returns potentially available from investing in its’ early adoption. Technology risk, market risk, business model validation and execution risk all await the early stage technology investor – and so does the commensurate outsized opportunity.

So how does the prudent sovereign wealth investor approach this opportunity? It is not for the faint of heart, but certainly prudent for those with sufficient resources and time horizons to weather it’s cycles and surprizes. On close inspection one sees considerably more failures than successes, even if one simply confines the definition of success to the success of the technology or mass adoption of the business model innovation, let alone the return on investment. Yet success when it comes, is outsized, and as history has shown, for the consistent investor provides an appropriate risk adjusted return. Proximity and intimacy are key to understanding this market, making specialisation by geography and sector very important.

With relatively small deal sizes, ranging from approximately $1 to $50 million, it is difficult for large institutional investors to invest at scale on a direct basis, even if they have the expertise and resources to handle such investments in-house, which is generally not the case. Further amplifying this mismatch between size and opportunity is the recent emergence of university based technology commercialization funds.

Extending the long held relationship between venture capital investing and technology commercialization, leading research universities such as Oxford, UC Berkeley, and others are establishing their own in-house funds to sponsor the most promising opportunities emerging from their institutions. Managing these diverse and specialized opportunities requires more than special capabilities that go beyond disciplined financial acumen. Further, deals, which may have taken months or years to mature, move quickly once in play. Meanwhile, asset   managers in this sector are expensive, with uneven track records. Given the relatively long time horizons, past track records may not be the best indicators of future performance. And access to those managers with the best historical records is limited.

Sovereign wealth funds also have a variety of models and structures to consider in addition to direct investment and primary venture capital funds. Options include: fund-of-funds, co-investment with managers, co-investment with fellow sovereign wealth funds or similar entities, or even co-investment with corporate venture capital. Access, alignment, cost, internal resources, scale and additional strategic benefit may all be relevant factors for selecting the appropriate method.

This, in short, it is an area which sovereign wealth funds should approach with a great deal of care and consideration.

Learning curve

To achieve the appropriate financial returns and, where appropriate, the relevant strategic benefits, I would advise sovereign wealth funds to add a third axis to their strategy in this space: the learning curve.

An investor embarking on a venture capital or innovation investing program for the first time should, I would suggest, be prepared to treat the first ten years as a learning phase to gain experience of this highly esoteric sector. In other words, this axis needs to balance the other two in importance. Rather than requiring or expecting ambitious financial outcomes from the start, the investor should lay the necessary foundations for success with a long time horizon. If the institution is not prepared to take a long view then, frankly, the world of early-stage investing is probably not a good fit.

If maximising the learning rate becomes a priority, the investment approach will naturally be rather different. Key considerations may include:

  • Investing in every vintage year, rather than trying to pick and choose the best moments, even though vintage year is critical to investment outcome. It is important to gain a deeper understanding of how cycles really operate and how investee companies and managers handle the different phases.
  • Making very long-term commitments to managers, not just for the fund they’re raising now but for the funds they’ll raise in future. This level of commitment, as well as willingness to enter at less popular points during the cycle, will also help investors gain access to the managers they want to work with.
  • Actively squeezing knowledge out of those providers. Venture capital managers do not tend to devote much time or resource to educating their clients, unlike more traditional asset managers. Engagements are generally limited to standard LP meetings. Investors that arrive highly prepared and keen to dig into the details during those sessions can derive a great deal of insight; investors that don’t will not.
  • Seeking to add value to current portfolio companies or the deals that managers are looking at. Learning to look at a deal and work out where you might be able to provide help to that firm is a valuable skill for future direct investments as well as funds.

Assets might include regional knowledge, political influence or relevant expertise, either in-house or among other companies in which the fund invests, to name but a few possibilities. Clear willingness and ability to leverage these advantages can also help investors gain access to hard-to-reach managers.

  • Finding out how the managers bring value to their portfolio companies. While most venture capital managers claim to be adding value, some do a far better job than others. To gain better understanding, investors can engage with the CEOs of the firms in which the fund invests. Such insights can also help to inform a direct investment strategy.

Once the first phase – the learning phase – has concluded, the investment strategy for the second phase will be far more astute. Investors can select their second generation of managers and/or their direct investments, not only with a better understanding of the opportunities but of their ability to influence and drive success.

Learning from other sectors: corporate venture capital

The world of corporate venture capital can, I believe, provide several useful parallels for sovereign investment entities. Corporate VC funds are focused on financial returns, yet their investments target businesses which have some strategic connection with the corporation.

For example, when Intel launched the 86-series microprocessor, the VC fund invested in firms that would write software for that chip, helping to build an ecosystem around their new product and shortening the natural time-lag between the availability and usage of new technology. Similarly, Apple used this mechanism to support software developers that helped to build an ecosystem around the iPhone, usually through taking minority stakes.

While I would not expect firms to acknowledge that those broader corporate considerations can take priority over pure financial returns for individual VC investments, my experience indicates that the reality is rather different. At the end of the day, the success of the chip brings more financial benefit to the company than the success of the individual software developer in the VC portfolio.

In the case of state development funds, national economic advancement or the development of strategically relevant industries at home might form the comparable dual objective. Those investors are not, of course, the primary focus of the study in Part 1 of this paper, although – as Part 2 illustrates – they can be highly relevant to the field of innovation investment, nurturing the technology sector in their own back yards. This extends from the development of in-country competencies to building entrepreneurial ecosystems and encouraging existing firms to facilitate scaling and globalisation.

In the case of return-focused sovereign wealth funds, the overall financial returns for the institution may be likened to a corporation’s overall valuation. Considering how different investments may interact with each other in an ecosystem and benefit each other, rather than looking at each investment in isolation, may bring greater overall success. By treating direct or VC investments holistically, improved returns and new opportunities may be unlocked.

With more than forty or fifty years of history behind them, corporate VC funds also provide a deep well of potential insight for investors that are keen to learn from the mistakes and successes of others.

If pursued with a long-term perspective and a respect and strategy to accommodate the necessary learning curve, innovation investing presents a great opportunity for true diversification, strategic and financial returns for sovereign wealth funds.


Appendix

1: SWF direct deals

Direct deals by sovereign wealth funds in TMT and Healthcare

Source: Sovereign Wealth Center

It may also be highly illustrative to examine the following (non-comprehensive) list of direct deals made by sovereign funds in technology businesses during the past eighteen months.

Direct deals by sovereign wealth funds (sample), 2015-16

Source: Sovereign Wealth Center

2: Sovereign Wealth Funds

While SWF definitions vary widely, the interviews in Part 1 of this paper focus exclusively on government-owned investment entities tasked with maximising long-term intergenerational savings. Stabilisation funds, development funds, central bank reserves and funds with explicit pension liabilities were not included due to the difficulty of comparing the objectives and strategies of such different entities when reported in an anonymous context.

As such, officials from the following 22 Sovereign Wealth Funds – which we believe largely fulfil these criteria – were invited to participate:

List of invited institutions


About the authors

Professor Jerome Engel is a Senior Fellow at University of California, Berkeley (Founding Executive Director Emeritus – Lester Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation; Faculty Member – Center for Executive Education), Founding General Partner of Monitor Ventures, Advisory Committee Member of Future Planet Capital, to name but a few of his affiliations. Contact: jsengel@berkeley.edu

Hamid Hamirani is Senior Advisor to the Minister of Finance of Oman, Member of the Investment Committee for the Oman Investment Fund, Visiting Scholar at Stanford University and an Advisory Committee Member of Future Planet Capital. Contact: hamid.hamirani@mof.gov.om

Kathryn Saklatvala is a freelance financial writer/editor and was recently appointed Global Content Director at bfinance. She was previously Managing Editor of Institutional Investor’s Digital Networks (www.investorintelligencenetwork.com) and Director of the Sovereign Investor Institute. Contact: kathryn.saklatvala@cantab.net

This paper was commissioned by Future Planet Capital as an independent study. Contact: agreen@hldpartners.com

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