Funding Indian Companies with PIPEs By William CateIn 2003, private equity investments in India totaled over one billion U. S. Dollars. Over eighty investors risked their money in over ninety Indian companies. However, private investment worldwide has been on
decline for
past three years. It’s expected to continue to decline and Indian companies shouldn’t expect to be exempt from this trend. The increasingly popular alternative to traditional investment options is Private Investment in Public Equities (PIPEs).
During
1990s, American Venture Capitalists financed about one private company out of every two thousand five hundred reviewed-business plans. After
one trillion-dollar Dot Com Meltdown,
odds of a private company receiving money from a Venture Capitalist declined to less than one financing in every ten thousand reviewed-business plans. The American Venture Capitalist’s initial investment package has declined from fifty million dollars to less than one million dollars.
The mutual fund industry mushroomed through
boom of
‘90s and mutual funds became a staple for US (and increasingly international) investors. Currently, they hold seven trillion dollars in assets from some ninety one million American public investors. In
past two years, a series of scandals have plagued
industry. Last year, four hundred and sixty four Mutual Funds were liquidated. Eight hundred and seventy firms were merged into larger and stronger companies. And, there were about fifty percent fewer new Mutual Funds formed. The creation of American Mutual Funds for overseas investment has declined and may eventually disappear.
Hedge Funds manage about six hundred billion dollars. Because their investors are wealthy Americans, they have not been subject to rigorous U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regulation. Recent Hedge Fund Scandals have created political pressure for Hedge Fund accountability. The regulatory inclination will probably limit
scope of Hedge Fund investment and operation in
future.
Access to these three traditional sources of business risk capital is likely to continue to contract. Their investment strategies are riskier than PIPEs. And, it’s
loss of investor capital that creates
scandals. It’s
scandals that motivate regulatory investigations. And it’s
investigations that create
media problems and
risk of civil or criminal charges. For fund managers, it’s safer and more profitable to reduce risk.
The American investment community is moving toward PIPEs. That is Private Investment in Public Equities (PIPE). They offer
investor liquidity, which reduces risk. PIPEs offer investors and
company greater leverage potential, which increases potentially greater profits.
Investment in a private company is difficult to recover. The company must be sold or
investors must wait until
private company’s profits repay
risk capital. In a public company, subject to regulatory requirements, investors can quickly sell their shares and hopefully recover their risk capital and even make a profit on a bad investment. Public company stock is a guarantee against complete loss of a risk capital investment. As in Venture Capital Models,
investors need not assume a percentage of loses in their profit calculations.
The Market Capitalization (issued shares multiplied by
company’s share price) is usually a multiple of
balance sheet value of most public companies. The greater value of
shares means that
investor leverages his investment by taking stock for his money. Equally,
public company can leverage its balance sheet by using its shares to acquire cash-producing assets and building
company. The axiom is
West in that Stock is Money.
Merchant banks are
traditional source of PIPE financing. However, in
past three years, major Venture Capitalists and Mutual Funds have entered
PIPE Market. Currently, there is more money available for PIPE financing than sound potential investments in U.S. Public companies. U.S. regulatory policy makes PIPE investing outside
United States more attractive, less risky and more profitable than doing PIPE financings of U.S. Domestic companies.
Non-U.S. Public Companies aren’t held to
same disclosure standards as their U.S. Domestic counterparts. The lower U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reporting standards for non-U.S. public companies potentially makes investing in these companies less risky and more profitable. However,
investor is betting that
company is honestly managed and a scandal isn’t likely.