Trustnet Magazine Issue 30 June 2017 | Page 14

YOUR PORTFOLIO / UNICORNS / UNICORN HUNTING Far from stumbling upon the Next Big Thing, Daniel Lanyon warns that anyone who invests in start-ups is more likely to find themselves down a dead-end A N EXTRAORDINARY AND PROFITABLE TREND has taken place over the past 15 years. Markets have been dominated by the meteoric rise of tiny technology-enabled start-ups that have become global behemoths and household names worth billions. A quick thought experiment. Amazon, Facebook, Google, Netflix and PayPal. How many times have you used at least one of these companies in the past week? What about in the past 24 hours? These global winners are ubiquitous in our daily lives but were once tiny companies staffed by a few scruffy nerds. Now they turn over as much cash in a year as a small country. GLITTERING PRIZES Investors who saw the opportunity have been hugely rewarded. A $1,000 investment in Google at its IPO back in 2004 would now be worth $20,000. The same amount in Amazon when it went public in 1997 would have made you a staggering $500,000 profit. And if 12 you had taken a private stake in either company before flotation… you’d be very, very rich. However, the reality for most investors is likely to be substantially different. Buying a stake in Amazon in 1999 at the height of the dotcom bubble would have meant an entire decade in the red before eventually realising a 10-bagger. You’d have probably sold. Some clearly got it right, though. According to CB Insights, there are 197 “unicorns” – another name for a tech firm with a billion-dollar valuation – that are still in private hands. Together these are worth $679bn, having raised $142bn from investors. This year 22 companies have joined the global unicorn club, while forty did so in 2016. Some industry professionals, however, question whether this means we are entering another dotcom bubble. For Daniel Lockyer, fund manager at Hawksmoor, the current market reminds him of the year 2000 in terms of valuations. “Disruption is a big theme with so much market share to grab from incumbents and this is why Uber, Tesla, and Just Eat and Purple Bricks in the UK are so highly valued,” he says. HUNTING GROUNDS Jason Hollands, managing director of Tilney, says the real opportunity is investing in firms before they trustnetdirect.com commercialise a product or service. The main challenge for investors is getting access to such deals. “A typical lifecycle for a tech company will initially involve bringing in some high net-worth individuals as angel investors,” he explains. A disproportionate number of unicorns evolve from a tiny corner of California. Companies gravitate trustnetdirect.com “Disruption is a big theme with so much market share to grab from incumbents” towards the richest pools of capital, Hollands says, and in the world of tech financing this means Silicon Valley. James Anderson, manager of the Scottish Mortgage trust, says it has more to do with “network effects” specific to west coast America. In his 2014 treatise Zero to One, Peter Thiel – one of PayPal’s founders and an early investor 13