Venture Capital Monitor - Q4 2007

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Canadian high growth innovative small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that commercialize research depend to a large extent on the venture capital (VC) industry for funding. Therefore, a strong VC industry is important for the growth of this segment of SMEs. The goal of this series is to provide current information about the VC industry in Canada. To this end, the series will track trends in investment activity, report on topical VC-related research and look at key technology clusters where VC investment is taking place.


Introduction

This year-end issue discusses Canada's venture capital (VC) activity during 2007, a year characterized by increased foreign investment in large deals and in late-stage Canadian firms. This issue's feature article highlights the ways in which business incubators support high growth innovative SMEs to become investment ready and attract VC investments. It also references a directory of some Canadian incubators. The "In Focus" article presents the Waterloo Region, a hotbed of technology activity and investment.

VC activity overview

Investment and fundraising

Strong growth in VC investments and a steep decline in fundraising

Venture capital investments in Canada reached $2.05B in 2007 (Table 1), a 21-percent increase over 2006 levels and the largest year-over-year increase since the peak achieved in 2000/2001. Much higher foreign investment levels in the Canadian market and a small number of large deals accounted for the bulk of this increase (Figure 1).

Table 1
VC investment and fundraising, 2004 to 2007
2004200520062007
($ millions)
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
Investment1699171317062059
Fundraising1780222016301190

Figure 1
Contribution to VC investment growth from 2006 to 2007

Figure 1: Contribution to VC investment growth from 2006 to 2007
Source: Computed by Industry Canada based on Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
Note * of Table 1: Federal and provincial governments.
Note ** of Table 1: Includes institutional and corporate funds.
Description of Figure 1
Figure 1: Contribution to VC investment from 2006 to 2007
Type of investors
Private independent4%
LSVCC/retail funds4%
Government Note * referrer of Table 14%
Others Note ** referrer of Table 16%
Foreign funds82%
Stage of development
Later stage113%
Early stage−13%
Start-up−4%
Seed4%

Canadian VC fundraising reached a new low, with only $1.19B raised in 2007, down 27 percent from its 2006 level of $1.63B. Fundraising was mostly concentrated in Quebec, which accounted for 70 percent of all funds raised in 2007.

Deal size

A few large deals contributed to a large net increase in average deal size

A small number of large deals made in 2007 drove the average deal size up. That average reached $4.5M, a 22‑percent increase from the $3.7M registered in 2006. Notably, 10 of the 457 VC deals made in 2007 accounted for 30 percent of the total VC investment placed in Canada. These 10 large deals were primarily concentrated in the life sciences sector. If these large deals are excluded, the average deal size falls to $3.2M. By comparison, the top 10 VC deals in 2006 accounted for 16 percent of the VC investment in that year. The skewing effect of the large deals on the average deal size and on total VC investment was greater in 2007.

The average deal size made by domestic retail and labour sponsored venture capital corporation(LSVCC/retail) funds, and private independent funds remains consistently lower than that made by foreign funds investing in Canada across different stages of firm development (Table 2).

Table 2
Average deal size ($ millions) by stage and type of investor
LSVCC/retailPrivate independentForeign funds
200620072006200720062007
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
Seed0.800.941.141.782.63N/A
Start-up1.191.271.941.978.964.15
Other early stage1.841.461.772.024.7911.16
Later stages1.361.622.342.309.1111.15

Stage of development

The increasing share of late-stage investing continues, driven by foreign funds

The share of late-stage investments continued to increase, with 67 percent of total VC investment placed in later stage Canadian companies in 2007 (Table 3). This increase is primarily attributed to foreign funds, which increased their later stage investments in Canadian firms by 62 percent, from $391M in 2006 to $635M in 2007. Foreign investors accounted for 46 percent of all late-stage investments, up 6 percentage points from their 40 percent share in 2006.

Table 3
VC investment and number of deals by stage of development
2002–2005200620072002–200520062007
Amount ($ millions)Number of Deals
Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
Seed and start-up150720%25115%25112%63724%10022%9220%
Other early stage233131%47828%43221%81931%13930%9521%
Later stages376650%97757%137667%115844%22649%27059%

The share of VC investments placed in seed and startup stages decreased in 2007, with the investment level remaining flat at $251M.

New and follow-on investments

Follow-on focus continues through 2007

In 2007, there was a continuation of the trend noted in 2006 towards a concentration on follow-on investments, of which 72 percent involved later stage deals (Table 4). New investments accounted for only 19 percent of total VC investments, with 58 percent of new investments placed in early-stage firms. Moreover, the number of early-stage firms that received funds for the first time has been steadily declining from 191 in 2001 to 84 in 2007.

Table 4
Distribution of follow-on investments, 2003–2007
2003–2005200620072003–200520062007
Amount ($ millions)Number of Deals
Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
NewEarly stages78058%20760%22358%43262%9758%8449%
Later stages56642%14040%16342%26938%6942%8651%
Follow-onEarly stages185550%52338%46928%59752%14247%10336%
Later stages181950%83762%121372%55148%15753%18464%

Type of investor

Foreign funds increased their Canadian investments significantly in 2007

As indicated earlier, the increase in VC investments in 2007 is largely attributed to higher levels of investments being placed in Canada by foreign funds. They represented 40 percent of total VC investment made in Canada during 2007, up 8 percentage points from the 32 percent they represented in 2006. Foreign funds accounted for 82 percent of the increase in VC investments in 2007. Although foreign funds increased their investments by 52 percent between 2006 and 2007 (Table 5), the number of companies receiving foreign funds increased by only 13 percent, indicating that foreign funds made even larger deals in 2007 than they did before.

Table 5
Distribution of VC investment by investor type
20062007% Change
Amount ($ millions)
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
LSVCC/retail funds3904054
Private independent funds3383534
Foreign funds54883652

In comparison, investments made by domestic private independent and LSVCC/retail funds grew by a modest 4 percent between 2006 and 2007.

Fundraising

Declining trends continue for both LSVCC/retail and private independent funds

Fundraising declined for both LSVCC/retail and private independent funds. LSVCC/retail funds raised $741M, down 18 percent from the $907M raised in 2006, while fundraising by private independent funds was down 33 percent from $666M raised in 2006 to $447M raised in 2007 (Table 6).

Table 6
Distribution of VC fundraising by investor type
20062007% Change
Amount ($ millions)
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
LSVCC/retail funds907741−18
Private independent funds666447−33

Regional distribution

VC investment increased in most provinces, with Ontario registering the highest increase

Ontario and Quebec remain the largest recipients of VC investments, accounting for 77 percent of all VC placed in 2007. Venture capital investment in Ontario jumped from $695M in 2006 to $937M in 2007, a 35-percent increase (Table 7). This increase is largely attributed to five very large deals of the 124 deals made in the province. Venture capital investment in Quebec also increased, although at a modest rate of 8 percent from $600M in 2006 to $648M in 2007.

Table 7
VC investment and number of deals by province, 2006 and 2007
2006200720062007
Amount ($ millions)Number of Deals
Number%Number%Number%Number%
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
British Columbia30118%31015%5213%4912%
Alberta372%583%174%164%
Saskatchewan171%553%82%72%
Manitoba251%181%154%92%
Ontario69541%93746%12130%12430%
Quebec60035%64831%17844%18946%
New Brunswick60%161%61%72%
Nova Scotia241%171%92%102%

Sector distribution

The information technology (IT) and life sciences sectors continued to receive over 80 percent of VC invested

Venture capital investments increased by 23 percent in the life sciences sector from $514M in 2006 to $633M in 2007 (Table 8). This increase can be attributed primarily to a small number of large deals, reflected in the fact that the number of deals decreased by 18 percent.

Table 8
VC investments by sector of activity, 2006 and 2007
2006200720062007
Amount ($ millions)Number of Deals
Number%Number%Number%Number%
Source: Thomson Financial Canada 2008.
Life sciences51430%63331%9621%8118%
Information technology88852%106752%22148%22048%
Energy and environmental technologies1207%1698%266%357%
Other technologies362%63%162%72%
Traditional1479%1848.7%10623%11425%

The IT sector experienced the same trend with investments increasing by 20 percent, from $888M in 2006 to $1067M in 2007, while the number of deals stayed at the same level.

Government activities

Similar to last year, the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) invested $113M in 77 deals, nine of which were at the seed and pre-seed stages (Table 9). The total leveraged amount that BDC invested with co-investors reached $721M, which represents a leveraging factor of over five times.

Table 9
BDC deals in 2007
2007
BDC ($)Co-investors ($)Number of deals
Source: Business Development Bank of Canada 2008.
Seed/pre-seed7 388 55011 913 4509
Start-up39 053 911191 288 40621
Other early stages43 943 316290 765 82824
Later stage22 705 872114 689 64823
Total113 091 650608 657 33177

The BDC has also invested $30M as a limited partner in two private VC funds, Novacap Technology III and the Government of Ontario venture capital fund.

Sustainable Development Technologies Canada (SDTC) played a key role in the largest VC deal of Q4 2007. An Ottawa-based alternative energy company that secured $54M in VC during the quarter credits SDTC's commitment of a $9.5M non-repayable contribution as being instrumental in attracting VC investors.

Export Development Canada invested $5M in one deal in Q4 2007, with co-investors contributing another $6M.

In December 2007, the Government of Ontario announced a one-year extension to the planned phase-out of the Labour Sponsored Investment Fund (LSIF) tax credit. The full 15 percent tax credit will be offered until the end of 2009 and the credit will not be phased out completely until the end of 2011.

As part of its Action Plan to Support the Quebec Manufacturing Sector, the Government of Quebec, in November 2007, announced a contribution of $25M to the Fonds d'investissement en développement durable (FIDD), a private equity fund that invests in clean technologies and renewable energy sources. Earlier in November, FIDD invested $31.5M in two Quebec-based clean technology companies.

Feature series: Creating quality demand for risk capital in Canada

This series of articles showcases organizations and programs that facilitate the creation of quality investment opportunities for risk capital providers. In this issue, the role that technology-focused incubators play in helping entrepreneurs transform ideas into quality investment-ready propositions for capital providers is featured.

Snapshot: Technology-focused business incubators

Venture capital investors are continually seeking quality investment-grade opportunities. Business incubators can play an important role in providing start-ups and entrepreneurs with much needed support in the form of business advice and services. Incubators can help their client companies become established and better prepared to develop a quality proposition for venture capital investments.

Canada has a number of business incubators in operation. They offer their clients, the incubated companies, a host of useful resources and services that can include

  • equipped office space;
  • laboratory space, specialized equipment, technical support and library services;
  • mentoring, networking and training;
  • business planning, management, marketing, accounting and financial advice;
  • facilitated linkages to sources of angel, venture capital and debt financing;
  • legal support;
  • guidance with regulatory compliance; and
  • seed capital in some instances.

A 2005 Statistics Canada surveyFootnote 1 confirmed that Canadian incubators have been successful in supporting the entrepreneurial process within their client companies as evidenced by high levels of client company survival rates and venture capital financing. The U.S. National Business Incubation Association also found that the survival rate of U.S. incubated companies stands at 80 percent after five years of operation, while only 44 percent of all SMEs survive until their fourth year.Footnote 2

Business incubators play an important and useful role by screening potential new client firms based on their market viability. The incubators are motivated to be highly selective in order to maximize their returns and establish a reputation for successful incubation, which in turn attracts the most favourable prospects. The U.S. National Business Incubation Association reinforces this behaviour with annual national awards for the most successful incubators and the most successful incubated enterprises.

Business incubators, especially technology-focused incubators, can be a fertile source of new quality investment opportunities for venture capital investors.

In Focus: Waterloo region

The Waterloo Region has — through innovation, entrepreneurship and investment — continually transformed itself over the last century from a region known for textile mills and farmlands into a magnet for multinationals and a hotbed for cutting-edge technology start-ups, investment opportunities innext-generation companies and locally developed world-class corporations. Its success has been attributed largely to the culmination of a number of factors that include a dynamic entrepreneurial culture, a diverse economy, a strong set of post-secondary institutions, and supportive business and innovation structures.

Dynamic entrepreneurial culture

The region is small and enjoys a thriving entrepreneurial culture that promotes a strong sense of community and collaboration among businesses and with local governments. These collaboration and knowledge exchanges are facilitated by a number of supporting business and innovation structures that are funded by local industries, community leaders, educational and research institutions, and local and other levels of government. Table 10 shows that a large number of local graduates remain in the region and form a significant part of the executive pool in local companies. Many of these are entrepreneurs who have worked in a number of local firms, which helps to strengthen networks and promote knowledge and technology diffusion in the region.

Table 10
Characteristics of the Waterloo region technology cluster in 2006
Information and communications technologyScience, technology and engineeringAdvanced manufacturingBiotech, life sciences and environmental industries
Source: Communitech, 2006. State of the Industry, Technology in Waterloo Region.
Employment levels (workers)13 3005 1009 2001 400
Portion of total revenue generated outside of Canada60%67%
Portion of firms seeking financing27%29%
Portion of firms that are privately owned56%72%55%
Portion of firms planning to expand their workforce82%87%60%75%
Portion of the pool of executives that are local alumni66%59%75%+50%
Number of firms284655858

Diverse economy

The region enjoys a diversity of sectors performing R&D, including advanced manufacturing, biotechnology, the environment, hardware, medical devices and services, photonics, digital imaging, information technology, software, telecommunications, defence, aerospace, robotics, wireless applications and devices, and multimedia. This diversity, concentrated within the region, coupled with the entrepreneurial culture, permits knowledge exchanges that further drive innovation and new business opportunities.

Concentration of post-secondary institutions

The region benefits from the presence of strong post-secondary institutions, such as the University of Waterloo, known for its engineering and mathematics departments; Wilfrid Laurier University, with its Schlegel Centre for Entrepreneurship; University of Guelph, known for agriculture and environmental sciences; and Conestoga College. In addition, the region is home to a number of world-class centres of excellence, including the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, the Institute for Quantum Computing and others that span a knowledge range from engineering to robotics to nanotechnology.

Supportive business and innovation structures

Local government, industrial, academic and community leaders have helped establish community-basedbusiness and innovation structures, with some provincial and federal support, that are contributing to the region's ability to commercialize ideas and innovate. These structures include the Accelerator Centre, a not-for-profit technology business incubator that opened in 2006; the University of Waterloo Research and Technology Park, designed to be a catalyst for resident enterprises to achieve technological breakthroughs, in part as a result of easy access to a vibrant research community; and Communitech, Waterloo's member-driven technology association.

Indeed, the Waterloo region technology cluster has earned impressive returns for its investors. The Communitech report, Making Magic in the Waterloo Region, highlights the excellent financial performance that the Waterloo Region has enjoyed in the recent past, including

  • an average sevenfold increase in value for investments placed in local firms at the time of exit;
  • $1.8B in acquisitions over the 10-year period ending in 2005;
  • an internal rate of return of 26 percent earned by a portfolio of Waterloo Region public technology firms; and
  • local firms that accounted for 10 percent of all technology initial public offerings on the Toronto Stock Exchange from 1996 to 2004.

Recent Thomson Financial data show that venture capital investments in the region have been in decline, posting VC investment levels of $46M in 2005, $36M in 2006 and $25M in 2007. However, there are indications that the angel investment community is very active within the region. A 2006 Communitech-funded surveyFootnote 3 of high-technology firms in the region of Waterloo found that the two main challenges facing local firms are financing growth and finding and retaining talent. Nevertheless, the region has a strong track record, a robust infrastructure and a strong entrepreneurial community that paves the way for continued success in generating quality opportunities for angel and venture capital investments.

References

  • Communitech, 2006. State of the Industry, Technology in Waterloo Region.
  • Communitech, 2006. Making Magic in the Waterloo Region.
  • Joseph, Robert, Michael Bordt and Daood Hamdani. Characteristics of Business Incubation in Canada, 2005. Ottawa: Statistics Canada, 2006.
  • Knaup, Amy E. Survival and Longevity in the Business Employment Dynamics Data. Monthly LaborReview, May 2005.

Notes

This publication is part of a series prepared by the Small Business Branch. The branch analyses the financial marketplace and how trends in this market impact small businesses' access to financing. Current research is focused on high-growth firms, the aspects of both Canada's VC and general business environment that affect the success of these firms, and the key players in the risk-capital market (for example, VC firms and angels).

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