|
|
|
|
|
by boulos
2457 days ago
|
|
So, I keep seeing articles comparing S&P 500 return versus the IRR of a VC fund, but none seem to compute "IRR" for the S&P 500. That is, they all seem to assume $1 invested at t=0 in S&P 500 (and I assume total return, so reinvested dividends), and then compare that to venture investing. Except an $100M fund isn't $100M instantly deployed. The investors are putting probably $20M/yr into it via capital calls. That makes a huge difference in IRR. This isn't to defend the particular investments or performance of any firm, but it does seem like the reporting is quite poor. Even taking the time to compute a "what if each year you invested 1/5th into the S&P 500" would be a marked improvement. But you definitely don't get to say "The 2010 Andreessen Horowitz fund performed slightly better than investments made in the S&P 500 in the same year" (as the article does). |
|
This is fairly little known, but large fund managers like A16z have access to "capital call lines of credit," provided by specialty lending arms of banks. These are loans secured by the commitments from highly-creditworthy institutional investors that allow the fund manager to fund expenses and investments by drawing down on the LOC instead of making a capital call. This allows the fund manager to push out the IRR clock even longer, and effectively levers their returns.
A more effective comparison might take into account both your comment regarding deployment period, and also the effect of investing on margin with the CCLOC.
Edit: an article on the phenomenon and how it is a bit tilted towards the fund manager: https://www.pionline.com/article/20180402/PRINT/180409992/ri...