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February 11, 2008

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Alejandro Santana

This is a very interesting post, especially for an investor from thousands of miles away. Investing in Spain is very different from investing in the USA.

The main difference starts with the availability of funds and the risk aversion. Investors are less used to taking risks of tickets of several millions of dollars in seed capital. These sizes of tickets are more usual in small private equity firms.

However, I find this information very useful to learn what the biggest and most advanced market in the world is doing.

Regards from Spain

Inaki Berenguer

Alejandro,

Yes, you are right. But the average fund in the US is $400M, with 8 partners in the fund. That means that each partner needs to invest ~$50M during the life of the fund (~7 years, although you invest almost all the money in the first 2 or 3 years). But a partner cannot handle more than 8 boards. The reasons is that VC partners spend a lot of time helping those startups with recruting, board meetings, customer meetings, etc.

$50M to invest in 8 companies: that means that they have to invest per company ~$6.5M (that does not mean that you invest all the money in the same round: you could invest $3M in round A and coinvest another $3.5M in round B).

That is why the philosophy of most VCs is the US is not to invest in a great idea but to invest in a great market with a great team. If the market is not large enough, they do not care because they are only looking at opportunities in which they can have a great ROI of those $6.5M. They do not care if you show them a riskless proposal to invest $1M and have $10M return. They would still need to make the numbers of the fund investing in many other companies and this idea would have consumed a lot of their energy.

Stay in touch.
Inaki


Inaki Berenguer
Home: http://www.inakiberenguer.com
Blog: http://blog.inakiberenguer.com

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