Bill Janeway, Managing Director, Warburg Pincus discusses the good and the bad of investment bubbles and why he worries about the Unicorn Bubble.
Watch the full talk, with transcript by following this link:
http://businessofsoftware.org/2016/01/bill-janeway-warburg-pincus-productive-bubbles-video-slides-transcript-bos-europe-2015/
2. Bubbles: A Typology
Locus of
Speculation
Non-
Productivity
Enhancing
Productivity
Enhancing
Object of
Speculation
2005-2008
1998-2000
Banking
System
Capital
Markets
3. Objects of Speculation
“Investors have speculated in commodity exports, commodity imports,
agricultural land at home and abroad, urban building sites, railroads, new
banks, discount houses, stocks, bonds (both foreign and domestic),
glamour stocks, conglomerates, condominiums, shopping centers and
office buildings.” (Kindleberger and Aliber, Manias, Panics and Crashes: A History
of Financial Crises, 6th edn. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) p. 15)
3
4. Bagehot’s Version
“The history of the trade cycle had taught me that a
period of a low rate of return on investments
inexorably leads towards irresponsible investment …
People won’t take 2 per cent and cannot bear a loss of
income. Instead, they invest their careful savings in
something impossible – a canal to Kamchatka, a railway
to Watchet, a plan for animating the Dead Sea.”
5. Nick Sibley’s Version
“A less flattering portrait of financial capitalism captures the recurrent waves
of speculative boom and bust that express the essential behavior of
financial institutions and markets, whose participants are compelled to
make commitments today in the face of inescapable uncertainty about the
world in which the consequences of those commitments will be realized.
Nicholas Sibley, once the public face of the leading investment firm in
Hong Kong, characterizes financial capitalism as a lush: “Giving capital to a
bank . . . is like giving a gallon of beer to a drunk: you know what will
come of it, but you can’t know which wall he will choose.” (Janeway, Doing
Capitalism, p. 136, citing Fildes, “City and Suburban,” The Spectator (London),
October 3, 1998)
5
6. The Double Role of Prices
“Prices play two roles. Not only are they a reflection of the
underlying economic fundamentals, they are also an
imperative to action. That is, prices induce actions on the
part of other economic agents. Some actions induced by
price changes are desirable, not only from the point of view of
the individual but from a system perspective, too. However,
some actions borne out of binding constraints or actions that
exert harmful spillover effects on others are undesirable when
viewed from the perspective of the group….The problem
comes when the reliance on market prices distorts those
same market prices.” (Shin, Risk and Liquidity, p. 4)
6
7. Perverse Demand and Supply Curves
“…[I]n a boom phase, we can characterize the decisions of a leveraged
financial institution as if coming from a decision maker who has become
less risk averse, even though the underlying preferences of that
institutions remain unchanged….When the price of a risky assets rises,
the leveraged financial institution purchases more of the risky
asset….But then, the additional purchases of risky assets…fuel the asset
price boom further….The upward-sloping demand response has a mirror
image in the downward phase of the financial cycle. When the price falls,
the risk appetite of the leveraged institution falls so much that, in spite of
the fall in the price, the desired holding of the risky asset falls. The supply
response is downward-sloping. As price falls, more of the asset is
dumped on the market, depressing the price further.” (Shin, pp. 10-1)
7
8. The Consequences of Securitization and
Mark-to-Market
“In an era when loans are packaged into securities and balance sheets are
continually marked to market, the galvanizing role of market prices
reaches into every nook and cranny of the financial system….[T]he
severity of the global financial crisis is explained in large part by financial
development that put marketable assets at the heart of the financial
system, and the increased sophistication of financial institutions that held
and traded the assets.
“The action-inducing nature of market prices is at its most dramatic during
crisis episodes, but arguably it is at its most damaging during booms….
“During a boom, the action-inducing nature of market prices do their work
through the increased capacity of banks to lend In boom times [when]
banks have surplus capital.…
“In the eyes of the bank’s top management, a bank with surplus capital is
like a manufacturing plant with idle capacity….” (Shin, pp. 1, 6-7)
8
9. The Limits of Arbitrage: Shleifer and Vishny
“Our article describes the workings of markets in which specialized
arbitrageurs invest the capital of outside investors, and where
investors use arbitrageurs' performance to ascertain their ability
to invest profitably. We show that such specialized performance-
based arbitrage may not be fully effective in bringing security
prices to fundamental values, especially in extreme circum-
stances. More generally, specialized, professional arbitrageurs may
avoid extremely volatile "arbitrage" positions. Although such
positions offer attractive average returns, the volatility also
exposes arbitrageurs to risk of losses and the need to liquidate the
portfolio under pressure from the investors in the fund.
(Shleifer and Vishny, “The Limits of Arbitrage,” Journal of Finance, 52, no. 1 (1997), p. 54)
9
10. The Limits of Arbitrage: Keynes
“There must surely be large profits to be gained from the other players in the
long run by the skilled individual who, unperturbed by the prevailing
pastime, continues to purchase investments on the best genuine long-
term expectations he can frame….[T]there are, indeed, such serious-
minded individuals and…it makes a vast difference to an investment
market whether or not they predominant….{but} investment based on
genuine long-term expectation is so difficult today as to be scarcely
practicable. He who attempts it must surely lead much more laborious
days and run greater risks than he who tries to guess better than the
crowd how the crowd will behave….The game of professional investment
is intolerably boring and over-exacting to anyone who is entirely exempt
from the gambling instinct; whilst he who has it must to this propensity
the appropriate toll. Furthermore, an investor who proposes to ignore
near-term market fluctuations needs greater resources for safety and
must not operate on so large a scale, if at all with borrowed
money….(Keynes, The General Theory, p. 156)
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11. The Inverse Shleifer-Vishny Model
“A dramatic demonstration in the real world of the inverse Shleifer-Vishny model
is provided by the disparity in outcome for two great investors, Warren
Buffett and Julian Robertson, when they declined to participate in the
dotcom/telecom bubble. Buffett’s funding base—the insurance liabilities of
Berkshire Hathaway—was and is self-renewing and thus effectively perpetual:
he manages a closed-end fund. The only recourse for a dissatisfied investor is
to sell or short the stock, and indeed, Berkshire Hathaway radically
underperformed the NASDAQ and actually declined during the final two years
of the bubble. But while the dogs barked, Warren Buffett’s caravan passed by.
In devastating contrast, investors in Julian Robertson’s Tiger Group of hedge
funds were subject only to the conventional three-month lock-up. The Tiger
Group peaked in assets and performance in 1998. In recognition of his long
record of superior performance, his investors gave Robertson the benefit of
the doubt, waiting until the first quarter of 2000 before they forced him to
close down and return their remaining capital, precisely at the moment
when the Bubble passed through its apogee and burst.” (Janeway, Doing
Capitalism, p. 171)
11
12. The Limits to Arbitrage: Data
“Institutional limits to arbitrage can also give rise to bubbles owing to
the nature of incentives and principal-agent issues in the rapidly
growing fund management industry. In the United States for
instance, the proportion of stocks held by institutional investors
hovered around 5 percent in the first half of the twentieth
century; from 6 percent in 1952, the institutional share then rose
to 45 percent in 1991, and 67 percent by 2010.…While the growing
presence of institutional investors might intuitively suggest markets
would become more efficient over time (and thus less prone to
bubbles), business risk and compensation practices in the delegated
portfolio management industry can encourage institutional herding
and ‘rational’ bubble riding. At the very least, incentives for
investment managers can dissuade them from leaning against
bubbles.”
(B. Jones, “Asset Bubbles: Re-thinking Policy for the Age of Asset Management,” IMF
WP 15/27, February 2015)
13. Share Prices and Economic Fundamentals
“[O]n average over the past century, U.S. stock prices
have been three times more volatile than
fundamentals . . . But the trend in the degree of
excess volatility is also telling. Up until the 1960s,
prices were around twice as volatile as
fundamentals. Since 1990, they have been anywhere
from six to ten times more volatile. Excess volatility
in equity prices has risen as financial innovation has
taken off.”
(A. Haldane, “Patience and Finance,” paper presented to Oxford China Business
Forum, Beijing, September 9, 2010, p. 15, www.bis.org/review/r100909e.pdf.)
13
14. Three Stylized Facts of Bubbles
“…[A]sset prices coincide with increases in trading
volume,…asset price bubble deflation seems to match with
increases in an asset’s supply, and…asset price bubbles often
occur in times of financial or technological innovation.”
(J. A. Scheinkman, Speculation, Trading and Bubbles (Columbia University Press, New
York NY, 2014), p. 11.)
14
15. The “Signature” of a Bubble
“[T]he connection between high trading volume and bubbles is a well-
established fact. This relationship…distinguishes models of bubbles based
on heterogeneous beliefs and cost asymmetries from ‘rational bubble’
theories. A rational bubble is characterized by a continuous rise in an
asset’s price. Investors are content to hold the asset at the current price,
because they believe that they are compensated for any risk of the bubble
bursting by a suitably expected rate of price increase. In contrast to models
based on heterogeneous beliefs and costly short-selling, rational bubble
theories fail to explain the association between bubbles and high trading
volume and cannot be invoked to explain bubbles in assets that have final
payoffs at a maturity date T, such as many credit instruments.”
(Scheinkman, Speculation, p. 10)
15
16. Keynes’ Bridge
“The daily revaluations of the Stock Exchange . . . inevitably exert
a decisive influence on the rate of current investment. For
there is no sense in building a new enterprise at a cost greater
than that at which a similar existing enterprise can be
purchased; while there is an inducement to spend on a new
project what may seem an extravagant sum, if it can be
floated off on the Stock Exchange at an immediate profit.
Thus certain classes of investment are governed by the
average expectation of those who deal on the Stock
Exchange as revealed in the price of shares, rather than by
the genuine expectation of the professional entrepreneur.”
(Keynes, General Theory, p. 151)
16
17. Entrepreneurs and Speculators:
Financial Valuation and Real Investment
“By conveying a positive signal about profitability, higher aggregate
investment . . . increases asset prices, which in turn raises the incentives
to invest. This two-way feedback between real and financial activity makes
economic decisions sensitive to higher-order expectations and amplifies
the impact of noise on equilibrium outcomes. As a result, economic agents
may behave as if they were engaged in a Keynesian “beauty contest” and
the economy may exhibit fluctuations that may appear in the eyes of an
external observer as if they were the product of “irrational exuberance.”
Importantly, these effects are symptoms of inefficiency, are driven purely
by the dispersion of information, and obtain in an otherwise conventional
neoclassical setting.”
(M. Angelotos, Lorenzoni. G. and Pavan, A., “Beauty Contests and Irrational
Exuberance: a Neoclassical Approach”, NBER Working paper, No., 15883, 2010, pp.
31–2; emphasis in original)
17
18. Financial Valuation and Real Investment
through the Cycle
“The effects analyzed in this paper are likely to be stronger during periods of
intense technological or institutional change, when the information
about the profitability of new investment opportunities is likely to be
highly dispersed. At some level, this seems consistent with the recent
experiences surrounding the internet revolution or the explosion of
investment opportunities in emerging economies.”
(Angelotos, Lorenzoni and Pavan, p. 32)
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19. Hot Markets and Cool Stuff: Theory-1
“Our model also implies that some extremely novel but NPV positive
technologies or projects may in fact need `hot' financial markets to get
through the initial period of discovery or diffusion, because otherwise
the financing risk for them is too extreme. This provides a more positive
interpretation to peaks of financial activity and may also explain the
historical link between the initial diffusion of many novel technologies
(e.g. canals, railways, telephones, motor cars, internet, clean technology)
being associated with heated financial market activity (Perez (2002)). This
implies that regulators should not always be concerned with popping
`bubbles', and furthermore, that those wishing to stimulate innovation
should look for ways to concentrate investment in a sector or time or
location in order to help create the coordination among investors that
creates or magnifies innovation.”
(R. Nanda and Rhodes-Kropf, M., “Financing Risk and Innovation,” Harvard Business
School Working Paper 11-013, December 22, 2011, p. 6)
19
20. Hot Markets and Cool Stuff: Theory-2
“By modeling the investor response to financing risk we are able to
understand why financing risk is likely to create or magnify innovative
activity, as well as lead investors to fund a different type of firm at
different times in the innovation cycle. Conventional wisdom on the
effect of abundant financing is one of money chasing deals (Gompers
and Lerner (2000)) - that when more money enters an area more “bad",
lower return, deals are funded. Our idea is that simultaneously money
changes deals. That is, when capital is abundant, more innovative ideas
are funded because financing risk falls in these times, increasing the NPV
of innovative projects. Thus, during peaks of activity financiers may
increase experimentation and fund a fundamentally different type of
activity.” (Nanda and Rhodes-Kropf, “Financing Risk,” p. 4)
20
21. Hot Markets and Cool Stuff:
Empirics
“We find that startups receiving their initial funding in more active
investment periods were significantly more likely to go bankrupt than those
founded in periods when fewer startup firms were funded. However,
conditional on being successful, and controlling for the year they exit,
startups funded in more active periods were valued higher at IPO or
acquisition, led more patents in the years subsequent to their funding
(controlling for capital received), and had more highly-cited patents than
startups funded in less active investment periods. That is, startups funded
in hot markets were more likely to be in the “tails" of the distribution of
outcomes than startups funded in cold markets: they were both more
likely to fail completely and more likely to be extremely successful and
innovative.”
(R. Nanda, and Rhodes-Kropf, M., “Investment Cycles and Startup Innovation,” Journal
of Financial Economics, 110, no. 2 (November 2013). p. 4)
21
22. The London Stock Exchange and Innovation
“Did it matter that by far the most important financial intermediary in the
early history of the British motor-car industry was a crook? The answer is
surely yes, for quite apart from the specific matter of the shortages of
working capital adversely affecting pioneer producers such as Daimler, the
Lawson saga marked the beginning of what would be an uneasy, mutually
mistrustful relationship between that industry and the City. The industry,
not unnaturally, feared being ripped off again; the City, just as naturally,
perceived the industry was full of unprofitable “lemons” and was reluctant
to subscribe or encourage the subscription of further capital. The analogy
with the electrical industry, following the catastrophic “Brush Boom” of
the early 1880s, is painfully obvious.“ (D. Kynaston, A World of Its Own: 1815–
1890, vol. I of The City of London, 4 vols. (London: Pimlico, 1995), p. 148.)
22
23. New Issues on US Stock Markets
“…[T]he cash proceeds from stock issues in the United States…were already
relatively high by the early part of the twentieth century, and the rapid
growth that occurred in the 1920s brought them to an impressive peak by
1930.
“However,…if we take account of the growth in the U.S. economy, it is the 1920s
that stands out as the decade with the highest level of stock issuance. No
other year before or after came close to 1928 and 1929 in the levels of stock
issuance as a percentage of national income….”
(M. O’Sullivan, “Funding New Industries: A Historical Perspective on the Financing
Role of the U.S. Stock Market in the Twentieth Century” in N. R. Lamoreaux
and K. L. Sokoloff (eds.), Financing Innovation in the United States: 1870 to the
Present (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2007), pp. 167 and Tables 4.1 and 4.2)
23
24. The Auto Industry and the Stock Market:
The Boom of 1915-17
“…[N]early fifty security issues were undertaken by automobile companies
from 1915 to 1917 to raise cash of more than $100 million in new
financings. Some of these issues were undertaken by the larger,
established companies in the industry….In addition, a group of recent
entrants to the automobile business, twenty of them in total, raised
funds from the financial markets at this time.
“…[T]hese companies were late entrants…, and the majority of them came to
a sorry end. By 1924, thirteen out of twenty of them had exited the
automobile industry….However, there were six survivors, including
Chevrolet….” (O’Sullivan, pp. 180-1)
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25. Financing Electrification - 1
“The dominant economic fact of the electric utility industry, determined by
technology, was extreme capital intensity. This had two major
implications. First, the industry had high fixed costs that had to be met in
order for a utility to be profitable, and relatively low operating or variable
costs . . . A substantial amount of capital had to be raised before any
electricity could be produced.
“A second economic effect . . . was that production was subject to
significant economies of scale . . . This meant that for most relevant
output levels, marginal costs were below average costs . . . If firms set a
price equal to marginal cost (the point to which competition would drive
prices under “normal” circumstances), they would be making economic
losses.”
(Hausman, The Historical Antecedents of Restructuring: Mergers and
Concentration in the U.S. Electric Utility Industry, 1879–1935, pp. 2–3.)
25
26. Financing Electrification - 2
“During the 1920s, the public equity and debt markets played the critical role in
funding the build-out of the systems that delivered electricity to industry and
to households, regionally and at length nationally. The public utility holding
companies, initially created to transfer technical expertise to local generating
and distribution companies, evolved into vehicles for providing the necessary
finance for an industry whose capital intensity rivaled that of the railroads.
“So electrification evolved through a dynamic feedback process that delivered,
generally at the state and local level, both speculative capital and
governmental regulation, the latter invoked to protect the prospective
returns on the former.…As the level of electrification for manufacturing
industry and (nonrural) residential uses passed 50 percent in the early 1920s,
consolidation of the industry into regional and even national holding
companies was enabled by a frenzy on Wall Street terminated only by the
Crash of 1929. Before the frenzy ended, installed generating capacity in the
United States had risen from 13 million to 33 million kilowatts.”
(Janeway, Doing Capitalism)
26
27. Aviation and the Stock Market
“…Initially, the public did not seem particularly interested in
investing in the aviation industry….
“Charles Lindbergh’s transatlantic flight in May 1927 changed
all of that…At the time, however, there were few…stocks from
which investors could choose. Wright Aeronautical was the
only aviation company with a listing on the NYSE. It made the
engine that powered Lindbergh’s plane, and its stock soared
from 25…in April 1927 to 94 ¾ by December 1927.
“…From March 1928 to June 1930, 124 public offering of stock
were conducted by aviation companies to raise more than
$300 million….” (O’Sullivan, p. 187)
27
28. Radio and the Stock Market:
The First Boom
“…The boon to the commercial potential of radio…was the development of
public broadcasting in 1920.
“By far the most important player in the radio industry…was the Radio
Corporation of America. It was established at the initiative of General
Electric, with the approval of the U.S. government, to bring all the
important patents in the U.S. radio industry…under one roof.
“The wave of entry into the radio industry was accompanied by a boom in
stock issues of radio companies. An expression commonly heard at the
time was ‘a new radio stock a day’….
“The stock market’s enthusiasm for the radio industry dissipated in early 1925
largely because of the pressure on profitability that high entry had caused.
The leading radio stocks lost 60 percent of their value from December
1924 to May 1926. If we exclude RCA…the decline…was…92 percent.”
(O’Sullivan, pp. 193-5)
28
29. Radio and the Stock Market:
The Second Boom
“Following the crash of radio stocks in 1925, there was a
lull…that lasted for almost three years….From March 1928 to
September 1929, twenty-five public stock offerings were
undertaken by radio companies to raise a total of $38.4
million.
“There was another bust in radio stock prices from 1929. The
stock market crash and subsequent depression played crucial
roles in precipitating the decline, but industry observers also
blamed another overexpansion of the industry.’ (O’Sullivan, p. 196)
29
30. The “-onics” Bubble:
The Return of Speculation circa 1960
“The bull market that got underway from the early 1950s was primarily
focused on the stocks of established companies….
“It was not until the late 1950s that substantial numbers of small, high-tech
companies once again sold stock to the public. An important catalyst for
the change occurred in October 1957….Sputnik galvanized the U.S.
political elite to make even greater financial commitments to the
development of technology….
“A boom in initial public offerings got underway in 1958 and continued until
the decline of the stock market in early 1962. During this period, as the
SEC put it, ‘The distribution of securities by companies that had not made
a previous public offering reached the highest level in history.’”
(O’Sullivan, p. 208)
30
32. The R&D Boom of the Late 1990s
“From 1994 to 2004, there was a dramatic boom, and subsequent decline, in R&D:
The ratio of privately financed industrial R&D to GDP rose from 1.40% in 1994 to
an all-time high of 1.89% in 2000 before declining to an average of 1.70% from
2002 to 2004, according to a survey from the National Science Foundation. As we
will show, just seven high-tech industries (drugs,office equipment and computers,
electronic components, communication equipment, scientific instruments, medical
instruments, and software) accounted for virtually all of the 1990s U.S. R&D boom.
More important, virtually all of the boom was accounted for by young firms
(publicly traded for less than 15 years) in these industries.
“From 1994 to 2004, there was also a dramatic boom and bust in both cash flow and
external equity finance in these industries. Internal finance (cash flow) for publicly
traded firms increased from $89 billion in 1993 to $231 billion in 2000, and then
collapsed in 2001 and 2002. External public equity finance rose from $24 billion in
1998 to $86 billion in 2000, but then plummeted 62% in 2001.”
(J. R. Brown, Fazzari, S. M. and Peterson, B.C., “Financing Innovation and Growth:
External Equity and the 1990s R&D Boom,” Journal of Finance, 64(1) 2009, p. 152)
32
33. The R&D Boom of the Late 1990s:
Evidence for the Explanation
33
34. Amazon
“Amazon’s IPO, on May 15, 1997…raised $54 million.…(p. 59)
“…In those highly carbonated years, from 1998 to early 2000, it raised
a breathtaking $2.2 billion in thee separate bond offerings….(p, 69)
“While other dot-coms merged or perished, Amazon survived through
a combination of conviction, improvisation and luck. Early in
2000…Amazon sold $672 million in convertible bonds to overseas
investors….The deal was completed just a month before the crash
of the stock market, after which it became exceedingly difficult for
any company to raise money. Without that cushion, Amazon would
almost certainly have faced the prospect of insolvency over the
course of the next year.” (p. 101)
(B. Stone, The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon (New York: Little,
Brown and Company, 2013)
34
35. “Profits of Doom”
“Let us now praise famous men, the wild-eyed enthusiasts who begat the
bubble-boom. When the stock market hit the puke stage, conventional
wisdom turned. The whole new economy thing had been a bad thing.
Time, talent, and capital were thrown away on unsustainable enterprises
like point-and-click pet food….
“Conventional wisdom…once rode side by side with the prophets of change.
“Today’s party line is that the gold rush brought both pain and gain.
Fortunes were poured into overflowing snake pits of fiber-optic cables,
which, like Web-ordered groceries, proved to be profit-free zones. In just
four years, the craze sucked up $600 billion of purchasing power….On the
flip side, public markets paid for a build-out of the network infrastructure,
and burn rates pushed the envelope of the culture at large…. (DeLong, p.
1]
35
36. Social Returns versus Profits of Firms
“In fact, history will look back and see gain and gain. That’s because profits
are not the same thing as social value. Just because a group of firms, an
industry segment, flopped as a profitmaker does not mean it failed as a
producer. Profit is primarily a signal about the size of a set of
enterprises…. If profits are high, the industry segment should grow; if
absent, it should shrink.
“That the dotcom and telecom sectors needed…to shrink has next to
nothing to do with how useful their products will turn out to be….British
investors in US railroads during the late 19th century got their pockets
picked twice: first as waves of overenthusiasm led to overbuilding, ruinous
competition and unbelievable…burn rates, and second as sharp financial
operators stripped investors of control and ownership during bankruptcy
workouts. Yet Americans and the American economy benefited
enormously from the resulting network of railroad tracks that stretched
from sea to shining sea… (DeLong, p. 1)
36
37. The “Killer App” of the Railroads
“[A] curious thing happened as railroad bankruptcies and price wars put
steady downward pressure pm shipping prices and slashed rail freight and
passenger rates across the country: New industries sprang up.
“Consider…the old Montgomery Ward and Sears Roebuck catalogs….Mail a
catalog to every household in the country. Offer the big-city goods at near
big-city discounts. Rake in the money from satisfied customers. For two
generations this business model—call it the ‘railroad services’ business
model—was a license to print money, made possible only by the gross
overbuilding of railroads, the resulting collapse of freight rates, and the
fact that railroad investors had had to kiss nearly all their money good-
bye….
“The same thing will happen with the froth that the bubble put on our
1990s boom. Investors lost their money. We now get to use all their
stuff….” (DeLong, pp. 1-2)
37
38. Current Events:
The Unicorn Bubble
“Over the past year or so, a phenomenon has emerged at the frontier of the digital
economy: a wave of ventures delivering “disruptive” web services: Uber, Airbnb
and their kin, generically known as “unicorns,” that share the double distinction of
being valued at more than $1 billion while remaining private companies. How can
we know whether these unprecedented valuations, some 107 of them at latest
count, represent a bubble…and, if so, why this bubble is different?
“…The venue of this bubble is the market for private placement of equity securities
with institutional investors – hedge funds, mutual funds, even sovereign wealth
funds – whose portfolios overwhelmingly consist of public, freely trade-able shares.
“Private placements of equities with institutional investors have a long history: more
than 35 years ago….But pricing of such placements was always at a substantial
discount to the valuation of comparable public companies, as much as 40%. For the
first time in the relevant record, institutional investors are choosing to pay
premium prices to purchase securities without liquidity and in increasing volume.”
(W. H. Janeway, “Unicorns: Why This Bubble is Different?” available at
http://www.forbes.com/sites/valleyvoices/2015/05/28/unicorns-why-this-bubble-is-different/)
39. The Unicorn Bubble: What Is Different
“First, “premium prices”: valuation metrics for the most recent financing rounds of
unicorns – calculated as enterprise value divided by annual revenues, given the lack of
profits reported by the vast majority of these fast-growing ventures – are currently
running on the order of twice that metric for comparable public companies.
“Second, by purchasing unregistered securities in the absence of a liquid trading market,
the new investors have chosen to forego the most valuable option an investor in a
speculative venture can possess: the ability to “sell too soon;” the right to get out
before having to find out if the speculation has been validated by economic reality; the
opportunity to make money even if the venture fails.
“Finally, the signature of a bubble can be discerned in the increasing volume of such
purchases of securities even as the disparity in valuation between private placements
and public markets has grown.
“Between 2013 and 2014, Goldman Sachs’ count of the aggregate dollar value of private
placements of tech company equity of more than $100 million quadrupled from $3.3
billion to $12.2 billion as the number of such transactions tripled from 15 to 49. And by
Morgan Stanley’s more inclusive reckoning, technology private placements have risen
from $9 billion and $10 billion during the twelve months ended March 31, 2013 and
2014, respectively, to $33 billion during the twelve months ended March 31, 2015.”
40. The Unicorn Bubble:
The Supply Side
“As the complex of technologies that enable the development and delivery of disruptive services
on the web have matured, the frictions that inhibit the growth of new companies have
declined enormously. At start-up, the cost of introducing a new service is radically less than
just 10 years thanks to open source (that is, “free”) software tools and the availability of
computing resources for rent as needed from Amazon and the other cloud suppliers.
Marketing begins with social media and advances through search engine optimization (i.e.,
gaming Google for better placement). And the service is delivered over the web as, from the
point of view of the user, the underlying IT disappears.
“So the number of Darwinian “hopeful monsters” grows while the potential scale of any one of
them grows even more. It is radically less costly in time and money to reach users and for
users to take advantage of the service. Before profits or even revenues are recorded, an
exponential increase in the number of users serves to imply a boundless market for the
emergent unicorn even before a model for revenue generation and a path to profitability has
been demonstrated.
“This especially appears to be the case for the web-based, two-sided market platforms
represented by Uber and Airbnb. Both the suppliers and customers enjoy virtually friction-
free access to services – including endogenous measures of service quality – that have
historically been provided through far less efficient means characterized by substantial
information asymmetries.”
41. The Unicorn Bubble:
The Demand Side
“On the demand side, institutional investors have now been living with real interest
rates close to zero for more than five years. Stock market returns have been
attractive since recovery from the Global Financial Crisis was established and have
averaged about 12% annually over the past five years. But the flow of new
companies to the public markets, with the potential to deliver extraordinary
growth and returns, has been highly constrained.
“For half a generation, since the last stock market bubble burst in 2000, the number
of initial public offerings (“IPOs”) for technology companies has been far below
the quarterly average of the previous twenty years, 10-15 per quarter versus
more than 30. One factor has been the extreme consolidation of the investment
banking industry since that time, with access to the market dominated by a small
number of dealers whose own economics dictate their interest only in large
offerings, more than $100 million.
“IPOs even at that scale limit the amount available to the major investing
institutions, who can only accumulate meaningful positions by buying into a thin
after- market, driving up the price against themselves. Under such circumstances,
it appears rational for investors of this sort to make substantial commitments –
many tens of millions of dollars – to offerings marketed as “pre-IPO” at valuations
which are advertised as taking into account the post-IPO price increases.”
42. Andreessen Horowitz, “U.S. Tech Funding” June 2015, available at
https://www.rebelmouse.com/TechnologyChannel/the-dry-bubble-we-may-be-in-what-that-
means-1204202002.html
43. The Unicorn Bubble:
How Will It End?
“Here, at length, is the crux of the matter. Sooner or later the unicorns
will either go public or not. If they go public, their valuation will be
subject to the two-way trading activity of the more or less liquid
stock market. So far, the indications are mixed, at best. For every
IPO that has validated the last private round in recent months,
another has recorded a substantial markdown.
“The alternative to an IPO, of course, is sale to a strategic, corporate
acquirer. But at the $1 billion-plus private market valuations for
companies not generating profits or in some cases even revenue,
the list of potential acquirers able to pay the price and absorb the
dilution is very short indeed, limited to “FAGA”: Facebook,
Amazon, Google and Apple, with perhaps Microsoft thrown in.
“The very existence of the FAGA set of players, of course, is what
motivates the underlying force of the Unicorn Bubble, expressed as
another acronym, “FOMO”- fear of missing out.”
44. The Unicorn Bubble?
What Will It Leave behind
“Institutional latency guarantees that the Unicorn Bubble will
persist yet awhile. The establishment of dedicated funds by
major investment managers, as well as allocations by several
sovereign wealth funds, will not be reversed overnight,
whatever the results of the IPO market test. Yet, there will be
consolation for society at large, if not for those motivated by
FOMO to sacrifice liquidity in pursuit of the next FAGA.
“Indeed, the vast majority of the horde of hopeful monsters will
fail to meet the speculators’ dreams and the failure of many
will take the ultimate form of bankruptcy. But there will be a
few amazing winners to demonstrate yet again the
occasional role of productive bubbles in funding economic
development at the frontier of technological innovation.”