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Venture Capital in Thailand(Report for OSMEP & Thai VC

Association)

Dr.Bill ScheelaDr. Thawatchai Jittrapanun

May 2007

Authors

Dr. Bill Scheela, ProfessorBemidji State University, USA

Dr. Thawatchai Jittrapanun, Vice Chairman, Economics BA

Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok

Focus of the Study

Two Projects: VC and Business AngelsProject One - Venture Capital:

Study VC Firms in ThailandImpact of the lack of fully-developed Institutions:

Financial InstitutionsLegal Institutions

Comparative analysis: Thailand, Taiwan, Korea, Vietnam, Philippines & Japan

Focus of Study

Project Two - Business Angels:Invest personal funds in SMEs

Study Thai-Chinese informal investorsImpact of the lack of fully-developed institutionsComparative analysis: Business Angels in the Thailand, Philippines & USA

Research Methodology

9 VC firms in the studyMost significant playersThe Guide to VC in Asia, 2006Thai VC Association

Structured, face-to-face, interviewsJuly, November 2005July 2006

Research Methodology

20 Business AngelsThai-Chinese (“Overseas Chinese”)Thai-Chinese Business Association

Structured, face-to-face, interviewsTested in August 2006December 2006-April 2007

Venture Capitalist Profile

Highly educatedSignificant VC experience

13.3 yearsSignificant business experienceMainly financial backgroundsActive, hands-on investors

Monitoring = 50% of time

VC Firm Profile

Median fund size: 720 million bahtAverage VCF age: 10.6 years3.3 partners managing 1.6 funds11.2 investee companies/VCF

30% - early stage70% - growth & mature SMEs

4.9 board seats/Venture Capitalist

Different VC Investment Strategies

Industry focusInvestment Stage(s):

Growth & Mature SMEsRecovering SMEs

1997 financial crisisConvertible debtIPO & Trade Sales Exit Strategies

VC Industry Characteristics

In transition to two levels:Level 1: Foreign VCFs doing large dealsLevel 2: Local VCFs doing small deals

Foreign VCFs are leavingRegional Funds replacing Country FundsLack of Thai competitive advantage

VC Industry Characteristics

Smaller DealsFocus on Thai Chinese family businessesSmaller Gov’t. sponsored VC funds

Corruption is decreasing but still significant

Improving transparencyBetter legal institutionsIn-depth VC due diligence

VC Industry Characteristics

Inexperienced VCsDo not analyze investment riskToo much focus on finance; lack analysis on operations

Highly-leveraged SMEsInconsistent tax incentives for investors

VC Industry Challenges

Finding good dealsLack of quality SME managersFamily businesses lack professionalism & resist restructuringSuccessful entrepreneurs unwilling to sell equity

VC Industry Challenges

Closing a deal is difficultLack of legal protection for shareholdersVCs are demanding majority controlEntrepreneurs don’t understand VCLengthy due diligence & negotiation processes

Exiting is very difficult

Value Added by VCs

Monitoring financial performanceEvaluate managementStrategic planningEntrepreneur’s confidantEvaluate acquisitionsWork with board

Problems with VC Investee Companies

Ineffective senior management14 CEOs removed by VCs

Ineffective functional management12 functional managers removed by VCs

VC Investment Performance

Investee company performance:27% above expectations38% below expectations35% meeting expectations

Fund performance:40% above expectations40% below expectations20% meeting expectations

Comparative Analysis(Global Competitiveness Report)

Venture Capital ScoreCompetitiveness ranking

5 variablesInstitutional ranking

5 variablesStart-up competitiveness ranking

5 variables

Venture Capital Score:Developed Countries

Country/Region VC Score

Thailand 40.5 (4)

Taiwan 22.1 (1)

Korea 34.3 (3)

Japan 25.9 (2)

(United States) (5.9)

Venture Capital ScoreDeveloping Country:

Country/Region VC Score

(Taiwan) (22.1)

Thailand 40.5

Philippines 42.1

Vietnam 47.4

Taiwan VC Model

Competitive advantage in ITStrong linkage to US Silicon ValleyStrong entrepreneurial propensitySupportive tax incentivesNational emphasis on educationExperienced domestic VCs with US connections

Recommendations(Research studies)

Develop robust IPO marketMost important driver of VC investment

Create an efficient entrepreneurial ecosystem

Reduce time to start a businessIncrease availability of capitalIncrease availability of qualified personnel

Continue to develop cultural support for entrepreneurs

GEM study – Thailand is #2

Recommendations (cont)

Improve legal protection for minority shareholdersEnforce more transparent corporate governanceReduce country risk

Corruption, political uncertainty, capital controls

Recommendations (cont)

Allow foreign VCFs to invest and partner with domestic VCFsDevelop less punitive bankruptcy lawsUse Taiwan’s VC industry as a role model

Business Angel Profile

Highly educatedSignificant business experience

Investing for 16.1 yearsMainly operation’s backgroundsVery active, hands-on investors

Monitoring = 70% of time2.4 board seats/Business Angel

Business Angel Profile (cont)

Median fund size: 90 million bahtDeal range: 4M (initial) - 50M baht3.6 partners/deal3.0 investee companies/BA

47% - early stage41% - growth & mature stage12% - other

Different BA Investment Strategies

No exit strategiesFocus on industries they understandIdentify significant profit & growth potential opportunitiesWork with the family business for funds and deals

BA Industry Characteristics

Weak legal protectionHigh business risk

Government corruptionHigh levels of bureaucracy/red tape

Thai businesses are inefficientLack QC standardsFamily businesses are too flexibleHigh levels of nepotism

BA Industry Characteristics

Networking is importantDifficult to find reliable partnerRapidly changing marketsHigh need for capital

Easy to start a businessSupportive financial/legal institutionsLow labor costsFocus on customer

BA Industry Challenges

Unstable political environmentCompetitive business environment

Low profitabilityDifficult to get reliable dataHigh personnel turnoverLow barriers to entryLimited distribution channelsBad work habits

BA Industry Challenges

High financial risks increase costsHigh funding costs/strong bahtForeigners don’t understand ThailandShortage of skilled labor

Weak legal frameworkInefficient government

Value Added by BAs

Strategic planningFormulate marketing plansMonitoring financial performanceOperational planningIntroduction to customersProduct developments

Problem with BA Investee Companies

CompetitionIneffective functional management

58 functional managers removed by BAsIneffective senior management

11 CEOs removed by BAs

BA Investment Performance

Investee company performance:29% above expectations36% below expectations34% meeting expectations (1.7% too early)

Fund performance35% above expectations25% below expectations40% meeting expectations

BA Recommendations

More govt. support for SMEs & VCMore IB focus for SMEsEmphasize start-up successesMore professional entrepreneursBetter education of entrepreneursFinancial support for SMEsBetter access to SOEs for SMEs

BA Recommendations

Improve the investment climateBetter support from financial institutionsMore govt. investment in basic industriesMore govt. support for tourismMore focus on traditional Thai practices

Traditional medicinesInvestment in education & technologyMore stable baht

BA Recommendations

Better political stabilityEliminate corruption

More equitable legal systemBetter balance between SMEs & big business for govt. influence

More reliable public informationReduce SME bureaucracy

Business Angel vs. VCs

Smaller deals than VCsBAs invest more in early-stage SMEsBAs more hands-on investors/close to homeBetter returns than VCs

75% of BAs meeting/exceeding goals60% of VCs meeting/exceeding goals

SE Asian Business Angels:Thailand & Philippines

Similarities:1. Invest in early-stage companies2. Network and co-invest3. Very active, hands-on investors

Strategic planningFinancial monitoring

4. Outperform VCs

SE Asian Business Angels:Thailand & Philippines

Differences:1. Filipino BAs primarily non Chinese2. Thai BAs make fewer investments3. Thai BAs do bigger deals4. Thai BAs work more with family

Business Angels:USA vs. SE Asian

SE Asian invest for longer time periodsSE Asian are more active investorsUSA more likely to have exit strategiesBA clubs have formed in USASE Asian BAs are not typical BAs

Operate more as Sequential Entrepreneurs

NEXT?

How to integrate VCs & BAs?Both invest in SMEsBoth face similar challengesWork together as investorsBAs: early-stage investorsVCs: follow-on investors

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