Last week, OMERS Ventures partner Laura Lenz said publicly what so many Canadian VCs are discussing privately.
âRecently, Iâve heard of re-pricing by investors between term sheet signing and final docs signed,â Lenz wrote in a Twitter thread. âIâve heard of final docs signed and money not being wired because LPs [limited partners] were failing to meet their capital calls. And shockingly, Iâve heard of money being wired and then pulled back.â
Lenz is not the only oneâsuch gossip is currently rampant amongst Canadian VCs. Since the summer, multiple sources BetaKit has spoken with have noted instances of capital calls not being honoured by LPs, including those for two prominent Canadian firms by US LPs. BetaKit is choosing not to name the specific firms being discussed as it has yet to independently verify these claims.
While these liquidity issues are putting the squeeze on some Canadian VCs, the immediate harm is to Canadian startups that are looking to fundraiseâincluding those that had closed rounds, only to never see the funds materialize or be clawed back.
While these liquidity issues are putting the squeeze on some Canadian VCs, the immediate harm is to Canadian startups that are looking to fundraiseâincluding those that had closed rounds, only to never see the funds materialize or be clawed back.
âOver the past few months we have heard of these experiences firsthand, as well as hearing from other investors and founders across Canada,â Lenz told BetaKit. âCollectively, we all need to do better.â
Sources with direct knowledge of each deal have confirmed to BetaKit that capital issues have affected three different startups across British Columbia, Ontario, and Québec attempting to raise funds. In one instance, a verbal commitment was revoked following contingent board approval of a spending plan that included layoffs. In another, a term sheet was not honoured following pro rata disputes, blowing up the round and leading to layoffs. In the third instance, funds were deposited to the startup before investors sought to re-negotiate the terms, resulting in the round being re-priced and a portion of the financing returned.
Many of the sources that spoke to BetaKit about ongoing deal challenges did so under the condition of anonymityâsome out of fear of reprisals from within Canadian techâs tight-knit investment community. For this story, BetaKit is choosing not to name any of the companies involved.
âThis is extreme for me and a real shock to whatâs happening in our market,â Lenz said in a telephone interview, speaking specifically to the behaviour of investment funds being yanked back from startups. âIt goes back to how that impacts the companyâthis is a company that thinks theyâve raised [funds], itâs been wired into their bank account, they built a two-year operating plan on and maybe hired based on it. And now that moneyâs being pulled back.â
Slow down
Lenz said these âfounder-unfriendlyâ moves may be explained by the current economic climate, but arenât excused by it.
âWhat behaviour do you want to portray? What relationship do you want to build?â she asked of VC firms. âWeâre not buying a house and trying to get the best price, weâre getting married and we’re going to live in that house with somebody else for the next seven to 10 years.â
Lenz saw similar behaviour after the dot-com bubble burst in 2001 and during the great financial crisis in 2008. While she noted in her Twitter thread that, in the early days of the pandemic, OMERS Ventures considered pulling signed term sheets, âthe conversation was less than five minutes as we agreed unanimously that we were investing in great companies regardless of market conditions, and we value our reputation.â
These are all examples of founder-unfriendly behaviour by VCs and growth equity funds. Yes, financial markets and the geopolitical environment are uncertain â as they have always been. Poor market conditions do not excuse poor behaviour.
— Laura Lenz (@LauraLenz) January 18, 2023
Itâs worth noting that OMERS Ventures benefits in this context by sole-sourcing its venture capital from one of Canadaâs top pension funds; other venture firms and funds draw from a broader (and more fragile) collective of limited partners. In both previous market routs and the current downturn, LPs have been hit by equity market volatility thatâs lowered their liquidity and devalued their portfolios. The result is an overexposure to venture capitalâan asset class thatâs considered higher risk and tends to make up a small sliver of investor portfolios.
âA lot of these large institutional LPs have massive portfolios and VC is a small percentage,â said one VC about the state of the Canadian market. âLPs are looking at their portfolio and finding theyâre way overweight in VC: it was only supposed to be five percent, and now itâs 10 percent, and theyâre stopping or pausing their deployment of capital to VC because they donât want to put any more money in the sector while waiting for the public markets.â
Todd Miller, global co-head of private capital advisory at Jefferies, told Secondaries Investor that for the first time in several years, capital calls are outpacing distributions for LPs. âWe think thatâs going to continue for a while,â Miller said. âThat will put pressure on LPs to do more sales, and supply will build. We expect it to be a very active year.â
According to multiple Canadian VCs BetaKit spoke with, several LPs called on venture firms over the summer to âslow downâ their pace of investments and capital calls as they sought to rebalance their portfolios. Some VCs listened. Those that didnât are now facing the consequences.
Call on me
Understanding how Canadian startups are affected by VCsâ relationships with their LPs requires understanding how capital calls are facilitated.
When a VC closes a new fund, the dollar amountâsometimes in the hundreds of millionsâisnât sitting in the firmâs bank account ready to deploy. Instead, it represents a committed amount from the VCâs limited partners. VCs only âcall capitalâ from their LPs when they need a cash infusion to fund an investment deal or cover management expenses. Firms typically set the expected cadence of capital callsâanywhere from per deal to per quarterâwith their LP investors upfront.
But LPs, whether theyâre multi-billion dollar pension funds or high-net-worth individuals, can be a tough collective to wrangle, and waiting on them to wire funds could slow downâor killâdeals. Calling capital regularly also increases the wire transfer fees investors would need to pay.
Enter the capital call line of credit, facilitated between VC firms and banking institutions to keep capital and deal flow liquid.
VCs take out these facilities from one or more banks, with each line tied to one of their funds. The line is typically a portion of the fundâs total valueâfor example, $10 million on a $100 million fundâwith the bank receiving a notional interest in the fundâs underlying assets as collateral for the loan. Having a capital call line gives VC firms the liquidity to quickly finance a deal without needing to wait on LPs, and pay off the balance once the money rolls in.
Has an LP missed your capital call? Did your round fall through because of VC issues?
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Thereâs also a slight financial incentive for VCs using a capital call line, said Elizabeth Yin, co-founder and general partner at early-stage venture firm Hustle Fund, whoâs based in San Francisco. When VCs calculate their internal rate of return, âthe clock starts [on that growth rate] when they do a capital call,â she said. Calling capital on a deal that ends up getting delayed weeks or months, while the money sits in the fundâs bank account, can have a small impact on the fundâs IRR.
âWe wonât do a capital call until we know weâre going to deploy money, but some people take it a step further and take out a loan [on the capital call line] instead so the clock hasnât started, put the money to work now and then do the call later to get a bit of a head start,â Yin said.
One Canadian banker BetaKit spoke to downplayed the importance of IRR juicing, however. They pegged a capital call lineâs notional benefit to the IRR at a roughly 40 to 60 basis point boost, a modest component of a fundâs overall return.
Domino effect or a red flag parade?
LPs have a strong incentive not to default on their capital calls: to miss one means losing the entirety of their stake in the fund. To do so also passes the danger downstream: VCs that canât fully clear their line of credit in the allotted time frame (usually within 12 months, often within six) are in default, and the fundâs underlying assets go to the lender. Those underlying assets? The VC firmâs equity stake in a startup.
While the consequences are much higher for investors who have already made several capital infusions, Yin said defaults are more common in the early stages of fundraising from LPs who may have buyerâs remorse or low confidence in the fund. Speaking to the US market in particular, she said this is something thatâs happening more in the crypto space.
âSome people are defaulting on purpose because they donât believe the fundâs worth anything.â
– Elizabeth Yin,
Hustle Fund
âYou have now VC funds, whose paper worth in their fund has dropped maybe even in half or moreâwe get a list of all the late-stage companies and what they’re worth now compared to before and the drops are crazy,â Yin said. âThey’re all over 50 percent cuts in valuation. And so late-stage investors’ portfolios are now ⊠cut in half or more.â
âAnd their investors are probably like, âthat’s terrible. Do I want to continue doing my capital calls for this fund?ââ she continued. âAgain, some people are defaulting on purpose because they don’t believe the fundâs worth anything.â
The banker BetaKit spoke with believes that the chance of defaults happening in Canadian tech is low given the multitude of options available to all parties. For example, VCs could either turn to the fundâs existing investors to pick up the defaulted LPâs share or sell that commitment on the secondary market (private equity firms such as Harbourvest, Hamilton Lane, and Northleaf all offer secondary funds). They added that with roughly $4 billion of dry powder in the sector, some of it in secondary funds, a defaulting LP is an annoyance that VC firms are well-positioned to solve themselves.
As well, multiple VCs told BetaKit that fund managers are incentivized to play nice in a down market. âItâs very delicate,â one VC said. âNine times out of 10 [if an LP asks to slow down] the VC is probably going to listen, because their business depends on getting that money.â
According to Pitchbook data from the third quarter of 2022, global dry powder across investment stages and sectors reached record highs of USD $585.5 billion.
Lenz is of two minds on the issue, noting that itâs âa fundâs responsibility is to make sure they have capital to deploy, and monitor and measure on a quarterly basis what reserves their existing portfolio needs versus what net new investments they can make.â
But the OMERS Ventures VC was also clear that having to call on other LPs to cover a defaulting investorâs stake âis not a good sign. ⊠It raises potential red flags [for other LPs] of whatâs happening in the fund or the market.â
VCs BetaKit spoke with noted that these red flags can have chilling effects downstream. Yin said as late-stage firms hold off capital calls to avoid angering LPs, fundraising becomes more challenging for startups at the next level down. When those companies turn to their insiders for bridge financing, those investors in turn stop funding new or early-stage companies.
âEveryoneâs focused on trying to fix their own internal metrics and their portfolio companies,â Yin said.
âFor the founders affected it’s probably just gut-wrenching and can destroy rounds and companies,â added one early-stage VC BetaKit spoke with. They noted that VCs prioritizing cash flow and internal metrics over prior commitments âsows a level of mistrustâ within the investor community.
âThere are many VCs whose word is their bondâbut for those whose word isnât, stories like this make it a less trusting market, and ultimately it makes everything harder than it should be. In other words, stories like this erode trust at a time when we can ill afford it.â
With files from Josh Scott. Feature image courtesy Shutterstock.