Venture capital funds globally continued their strong run of performance over recent years in the first quarter of 2018, with a near-record return of 1.45x, according to new data published by eFront.
The company’s latest Quarterly Private Equity Performance Report shows that despite a small seasonal dip from the all-time high of 1.49x recorded in Q4 2017, venture capital returns continued their strong performance of the past three years in Q1, sitting at 1.45x. Multiples have been hovering between 1.40x and 1.50x since Q4 2014 and remain well above the long-term average.
Active global VC funds currently show an excess performance of 0.21x when compared to the average of 1.24x over the period 2008-2018, while Western Europe funds of vintages 2009-14 are recording strong outperformance of the long-term trend.
US VC funds meanwhile, tend to underperform their long-term average, due in part to the skewing effect of the “golden years” in the 1990s. Overall, fund selection risk (measured as the dispersion of performance between the top and bottom 5% of performers) continues to decrease, hitting 1.54x, compared with 1.96x at the end of 2015.
Tarek Chouman, CEO of eFront, says: “2018 started well for VC funds: multiples on invested capital remain close to their all-time high of Q4 2017, while selection risks and time-to-liquidity are close or back to their long-term average. For investors, falling selection risk is clearly good news, in admittedly a benign environment. However, the reduction of performance spread also implies that top funds could face increased difficulties generating outperformance. As the gap in performance between top and bottom funds decreases, VC funds converge towards the pooled average.”
Going in to 2018, US venture capital fund performance has remained steady, while European funds suffered a decline. While active US funds are benchmarked with exceptional historical years, active Western European funds benefit from the opposite phenomenon.
For Western Europe, the performance of vintages 2009-14 remains strong in comparison to the all-time average. Unlike their American peers, the average Western Europe fund does not include “golden years” prior to the dotcom crash, which could explain the significant outperformance. More recent vintage years have recorded declining multiples in Q1 2018, hinting at a possible cooling of asset prices.
The picture of US VC funds is more contrasted. Vintage years 2009, 2011 and 2014 all underperform the long-term average – as could be expected given the average is skewed by the strong years in the 1990s, 2010, 2012 and 2015 all seem to outperform.