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Venture Capital in Australia
Michael Priestley
Economics, Commerce and Industrial Relations Group
22 May 2001
Venture capital investment in Australia has reached
the $2.6 billion mark, with a further $2.3 billion committed for
future investment in current projects. In the last year, a total of $829
million was invested in 126 new and follow-on investments by the Australian
venture capital sector, according to a recently released survey by the
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).(1) The ABS survey was
prompted by the tax regime incentives contained in the 1999-2000 Budget
and recommended by the Ralph Review of Business Taxation.(2)
The term 'venture capital' is used to describe investments in businesses
at various stages of development. It includes seed and start-up capital,
expansion-stage capital, later-stage development capital, and finance
for management buy-outs and buy-ins of established businesses. Locally
sourced venture capital has assisted in the growth and development of
many small enterprises which began with seed capital. Some notable examples
of venture capital backed companies are Energy Development Ltd, Austal
Ships Ltd, LookSmart, ResMed, and Cinema Plus Ltd, the Imax cinema venture.
This Research Note provides an overview of venture capital in Australia
as revealed by the ABS survey. The Note also examines the contribution
of superannuation funds and institutions to venture capital funding.
ABS Survey at a Glance
The survey identified 97 venture capital managers in Australia, who manage
123 investment vehicles. The 123 investment vehicles had 569 investments
in venture capital projects across a wide range of industries including
tourism and hospitality, healthcare services, biotechnology, construction,
transportation, IT, media and agriculture.
On an industry basis, the most popular industries for investment were
industrial manufacturing with 129 investments, property and business services
with 83, communications with 80 and mining with 58. Almost half of the
investments were in computer-related and consumer-related industries such
as computer software, the Internet, electronics, communications and IT.
An analysis of the distribution of investments revealed that New South
Wales and Victoria received the most number of investments, followed by
the second tier states of Western Australia and Queensland, and the third
tier of South Australia and Tasmania, Australian Capital Territory and
Northern Territory. NSW accounted for 56 per cent of the value of all
investments, more than twice the value of investments in investee companies
as Victoria. Similar industry surveys confirm New South Wales as the clear
leader both in the number and value of investments received, and the 2:1
ratio in the provision of venture capital between New South Wales and
Victoria.(3)
Exits
A venture capital firm has four options when exiting an investment: trade
sale, initial public offering (IPO), buy-back and liquidation. In 1999-2000,
24 companies were sold, 12 companies went public, 4 companies were bought
back and 19 investments were liquidated. The value of exits during the
year 1999-2000 was $536 million and the percentage of exits relative to
new investments was 80 per cent. The average trade sale was $3.7 million,
while the value of all IPOs was $346 million.
Seed and Early-Stage Capital
The ABS survey also showed that companies in the seed and early expansion-stage
attracted the most number of investments (305), representing 54 per cent
of all investments and 38 per cent of the capital invested. By contrast,
management buy-out activity was low, with 58 investments for 19 per cent
of capital invested.
The Role of Super Funds and Institutions
Australian superannuation funds continue to be the largest source of
venture capital, with 35 per cent of the $4.9 billion or $1.733 billion
committed for investment at the end of June 2000, followed by non-residents
with 21 per cent (see accompanying table). While this figure compares
favourably with the percentage of venture capital sourced from pension
funds in other countries, it still represents only 0.5 per cent of
the superannuation funds' investment portfolio.(4)
The relative importance of super funds as a source of venture capital
is borne out in industry surveys, although the proportion of super funds'
contribution to the growth of venture capital in Australia is declining.
According to the 2000 Australian Venture Capital Yearbook,
contributions from these sources accounted for 31 per cent of all capital
under management, a decrease from 38 per cent in 1999 and from 40 per
cent in 1998.(5)
While super funds are an important source of local venture capital, they
also invest in overseas venture capital markets. They contribute about
27 per cent of this investment, with Australian institutions playing a
much larger role in the funding of overseas venture capital enterprises.
A survey of 30 institutions by the Australian Venture Capital Journal
included 17 super funds and private investment companies. While an incomplete
picture of the venture capital industry sector, the sample is nevertheless
revealing.
As at 30 June 2000, only 46 per cent of the total $4.1 billion of venture
capital invested by these institutions was invested in Australia. The
remainder, $2.2 billion, was held in overseas investments. More importantly,
the average allocation to Australian investment managers was $14.5 million
compared to $37.7 million for overseas managers. Super funds were clearly
the more enthusiastic supporters of the Australian venture capital sector.
They invested more than $1.3 billion in local venture capital enterprises
compared with $565 million by Australian institutions. UniSuper was
the single largest participant in the venture capital sector with $204
million, the Australian Retirement Fund followed with $168.5 million.
On the other hand, institutions were more attracted to global investment
having invested close to $1.3 billion in overseas venture capital markets.
Of the respondents to the survey, National Asset Management-Global Private
Equity was the largest investor. It had $642.9 million invested overseas,
followed by AMP Life which had $389 committed, with another $128 million
in Australia.(6)
Conclusions
The IT and e-commerce revolutions have proved a catalyst for the continued
growth of the venture capital industry in Australia. As the ABS survey
shows, firms invested predominantly in computer-related and consumer-related
industries in the communications, IT, services and manufacturing sectors,
which have significant potential for high value added and export growth.
In terms of the geographical spread of investments, the majority of venture
capital investments were made in New South Wales.
The ABS survey also reflects other industry surveys which show that super
funds are under-invested in this asset allocation, confirming a conservative
investment approach to investing in the Australian venture capital sector.
But more revealing is the minor role played by Australian institutions,
which are clearly less enthused about investing in home-grown innovative
enterprises. It remains to be seen, therefore, whether the recent tax
incentives recommended by the Ralph Review of Business Taxation are sufficient
to encourage greater institutional investment in the industry.
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F4 Source of Funds of Investment Vehicles-At 30 June 2000
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| |
Commitments
by Investors
|
Drawdowns
from Investors
|
Unused Commitment
|
|
|
Investment
|
|
Investment
|
|
|
|
|
Vehicles
|
Value
|
Vehicles
|
Value
|
Value
|
|
|
no.
|
$m
|
no.
|
$m
|
$m
|
|
Residents
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Banks
|
19
|
340
|
18
|
229
|
111
|
|
General government
|
6
|
120
|
5
|
60
|
61
|
|
Public trading enterprises
|
10
|
125
|
10
|
63
|
62
|
|
Private trading enterprises
|
29
|
358
|
28
|
221
|
136
|
|
Superannuation funds
|
49
|
1 733
|
48
|
883
|
850
|
|
Life insurance offices
|
9
|
183
|
9
|
92
|
91
|
|
Trusts
|
12
|
88
|
12
|
50
|
38
|
|
Funds of trusts
|
18
|
314
|
18
|
173
|
141
|
|
Other
|
56
|
418
|
56
|
343
|
75
|
|
Not stated
|
18
|
199
|
18
|
199
|
-
|
|
Total resident
|
. .
|
3 877
|
. .
|
2 314
|
1 564
|
|
Non Residents
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Superannuation funds
|
5
|
21
|
5
|
19
|
2
|
|
Other
|
26
|
1 002
|
23
|
292
|
711
|
|
Total non-resident
|
. .
|
1 023
|
. .
|
310
|
713
|
|
Total
|
. .
|
4 900
|
. .
|
2 624
|
2 276
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- Australian Bureau of Statistics, Managed Funds, Cat. No. 5655.0,
released on 28 February 2001.
- A key recommendation of the Ralph Review was to promote venture capital
investments by exempting capital gains tax earned through Pooled Development
Funds by Australian superannuation funds, and exempting from capital
gains tax investments in venture capital projects by non-resident tax-exempt
pension funds, such as US and UK pension funds (see Review of Business
Taxation: A Tax System Redesigned, Section 19: Venture capital tax
relief, pp. 611-22, July 1999).
- See 'Venture Capital Survey: Australia & New Zealand Investment
Activity-2000', Australian Venture Capital Journal, March 2001,
No. 96, p. 6.
- In the US, pension schemes contribute 30 per cent of the total invested
by US venture capital fund managers and invest, on average, about 1.5
per cent of their assets in venture capital. In the EU, they contribute
24 per cent of funds raised by the venture capital sector. See Institutional
Investors', Financial Times, 1 December 2000 and Benchmarking
Australian Institutional Investment in Domestic Venture Capital,
Department of Industry, Science and Resources, June 2000, p. 27.
- See 2000 Australian Venture Capital Yearbook, Australian Venture
Capital Association Ltd, prepared by Venture Economics/Thomson Financial.
- 2000 AVCJ Survey of Institutional Investors', Australian Venture
Capital Journal, November 2000, No. 93, pp. 18-25.

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