Estimating Unobserved Complementarities between Entrepreneurs and Venture Capitalists

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Academic Paper
Title Estimating Unobserved Complementarities between Entrepreneurs and Venture Capitalists
Author Ed Egan, Jeremy Fox, David Hsu
RAs Amir Kazempour
Status In development
© edegan.com, 2016


Reference Papers

Jeremy's paper with David Hsu and Chenyu Yang is here:

Fox Hsu Yang (2015) - Unobserverd Heterogeneity in Matching Games with an Application to Venture Capital provides some notes.

Matlab Code

Abhijit Brahme (Work Log) contains his notes on working with the Matlab code. This needs a separate page.

Data specification

The data spec sent to Jeremy is in:

Z:\Projects\MatchingAcceleratorsToVCs

Data foundations

The database is vcdb2

The foundational tables were built using:

Z:\VentureCapitalData\SDCVCData\vcdb2\ProcessData2.sql

The documentation, which is a little messy, is on VC Database Rebuild

Our SQL script, which builds on top of the above database (still in vcdb2) is in:

E:\McNair\Projects\MatchingEntrepsToVC\DataWork

Dataset build

Decisions

Decisions we need to make:

  • Will we need synthetic matches? If so what we do we do for outcomes? Can still do dyadic and left/right pair variables.
  • Granularity of industry: To start let's use minor industry group (see below). We use a much finer grained industry definition and aggregate back up to balance out the counts somewhat later.
  • Matching to a fund or a firm: For now, we will work with funds, though deals are sometimes transferred across funds within a firm (i.e. from Kliener fund IV to Kliener fund V), this is probably comparatively rare (check!).
  • Dealing with the right censorship problem: We can likely address this with indicator variables to condition on, but may want to restrict estimation to dyads that don't have this issue. For now we will take portfolio companies that received their last investment before 2007, to allow funds a full 10 years to clear their portfolios.
  • Inadequate coverage in early years: VentureXpert's coverage is notably inferior prior to 1982. We should start with portco that received their first investment in 1985 and forward.
  • Determination of lead VC - see below
  • How to collapse VC rounds (date, amount, etc.): We will use only seed, early, later stage investment and insist on the presence of seed/early for inclusion. We can then have date first, investment duration (to date last), total investment.

Objective dataset description

Unit of observation - a startup-fund match.

Constraints:

  • PortCo name disclosed
  • PortCo date of first investment >= 1/1/1985
  • PortCo date of last investment <= 2007 to allow 10 yrs for the funds
  • PortCo received at least one round of Seed or Early stage investment
  • Matched VC is not undisclosed

Variables:

Startup:

  • PortCo ID
  • PortCo Name
  • Longitude, latitude,
  • State of inc., industry, year of founding, year of first investment, year of last investment
  • SEL $invested, SEL num rounds, transactional VC indicator and $inv, investment duration SEL (yrs)
  • Exit indicator, exit value, exit type indicator
  • alive2016 indicator, last round pre-2012 indicator
  • total MOOMI (Money Out Over Money In)

Fund:

  • fund ID
  • fund name
  • Number of funds investing (SEL)
  • As averages (?) and for lead:
    • Fund ipo count, Fund M&A count, Fund investment count(calc at end), fund ipo rate, fund M&A rate, fund exit count, fund exit rate, fund ipo $, fund M&A $, fund exit $, fund fraction of MOOMI.
  • Total invested by lead, number of rounds participation by lead, stage of participation of lead, location of lead, last investment pre-2012 indicator, lead fund type indicator (corp, priv, gov, etc.), lead fund size, lead fund vintage year.

Dyadic variables:

  • Distance between lead and portco,
  • industry preference match between lead and portco
  • maybe stage-match (doesn't make a lot of sense when collapsing rounds) between lead and port co.

Identifying lead VCs

Possible methods:

  • Best performing participant (on exit count/value or fractional MOOMI) with tie-breaker
  • Closest participant (using great circle distance)
  • Most frequent participant with tie-breaker
  • Participant with greatest investment with tie-breaker
  • Participant in earliest round that stayed in for longest with tie-breaker

Minor Industry

Across all time and without regard to SEL vs. transaction, here's the minor industry list and counts:

        indminorgroup          | count
-------------------------------+-------
Industrial/Energy              |  2871
Internet Specific              |  8794
Biotechnology                  |  2592
Semiconductors/Other Elect.    |  2402
Other Products                 |  4891
Computer Hardware              |  2061
Computer Software and Services | 10550
Communications and Media       |  3271
Medical/Health                 |  4373
Consumer Related               |  3161

Work Done in Late November by Dylan & Ed

SBIR Data taken from McNair\Projects\SBIR\Data\Aggregate SBIR\SBIR.txt. -Note! This file needed to be opened in excel to be readable, and took a very long time to open due to its large size. SBIR firm names converted to a pivot table to eliminate exact repeat entries, and then exported to a txt file, NSBIR. NSBIR then matched using The Matcher in mode 2 with the following code "-file1="NSBIR.txt" -file2="NSBIR.txt" -mode=2" Output then placed in McNair\Projects\MatchingEntrepsToVC\Matching\Output. The original pre-matched, cleaned NSBIR.txt file is moved to McNair\Projects\MatchingEntrepsToVC\Matching\Intput.