INVESTING IN PRIVATE UNLISTED COMPANIES - THE EVOLUTION HAS COMMENCED.

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INVESTING IN PRIVATE UNLISTED COMPANIES - THE EVOLUTION HAS COMMENCED. WHY THE WORLD S BEST INVESTORS ARE PUTTING MORE INTO UNLISTED SHARES THAN LISTED We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next ten. Don't let yourself be lulled into inaction. Bill Gates It is human nature to overestimate the short-term impacts of any event or trend, and to underestimate the long-term impact. This commonly accepted behavioral trait applies to any discipline, but is particularly relevant in the financial markets we operate in today. Witness the recent phenomenon of equity markets reaction to Trump s tax policy; we are yet to see any detail, yet markets have fully priced in substantial earnings growth. In contrast, global markets almost uniformly underestimated the long-term impact of the GFC on global economic growth; economists have overestimated global growth every year since 2008. HIGH CONVICTION INVESTING: UNDERSTANDING MARKET PSYCHOLOGY AND READING LONG-TERM ECONOMIC TRENDS At Crossinvest we are strong believers in high-conviction investing, particularly when markets are trading at such high values as they are today. Successful high-conviction equity investing requires an understanding of market psychology, investors propensity to overreact in the short-term, and a grasp of what drives long-term fundamental values. Today s markets are producing low economic returns overall, but that does not mean that value can no longer be found. There are great companies out there whose products are creating a leap forward in productivity (such as technology companies). There are companies which are well placed to take advantage of secular economic shifts (such as aged care). In a similar fashion, it is critical to understand and identify the sectors that will come under further margin pressure due to the rapidly changing digital technology landscape. 1

THE BEST CONVICTION PLAYS AREN T EVEN LISTED YET Now the above might all seem obvious to experienced investors: Of course we should be trying to spot tomorrow s technology winners the next Google, Uber, Fitbit, or Alibaba. But here s the part that most investors are missing: by the time these companies list, most of the big gains have already been made. Of all of the technology stocks that have gone to IPO in the US since Google in 2004, investors prior to the IPO made an average of 80.8% pa by the day of listing. Those that waited for the IPO averaged 11.2% pa since then. The main cause for this is the rapid development of venture capital markets globally. VC investors will now invest in companies as large as Uber. This means that the best companies do not need to list to access vast pools of capital. The average technology company is listing at an age of around 11 years, by which time the company may, in all likelihood, have reached a level of maturity it is during these 11 years where most of the growth is likely to have occurred. ANNUAL RETURNS FOR TECHNOLOGY COMPANIES PRE AND POST-IPO Based on listings for which information is available about their valuations at Series A (pre-revenue) or Series C (rapid growth) stages. The data is from 38 companies incl Google, Alibaba, Facebook, Groupon, LinkedIn, Fitbit, Square. EQUITY ASSET CLASS CAN NO LONGER BE CONSTRAINED TO LISTED ONLY The equity asset class is an essential component of any investment portfolio. The purpose of investing in equities as an asset class is to gain a direct, positive exposure to economic growth cycles. Many people believe that equities means only listed market stocks bought directly, through a broker or through a managed fund. In order to achieve such direct, positive exposure to economic growth cycles, and to have the flexibility to move in and out of markets, portfolio managers will allocate across several equity sub-classes and strategies: large caps, mid-caps, small caps, emerging markets, long/short or market neutral strategies. The allocations are gradually shifting now to private and unlisted companies. The emotion-driven volatility and the high valuations of listed markets have pushed many 2

of the world s largest and most successful investors to invest more in private capital than they do in listed equities. Consider the Yale Endowment Fund, widely recognised as one the smartest investment teams globally. It has just 3.9% of its capital in domestic (US) equities and a further 14.7% in international listed equities. This however is eclipsed by 16.2% in Private Equity and 16.3% in Venture Capital. Princeton, MIT and Bowdoin College all follow Yale s model, and have been outperforming their peers for over 20 years. Europe s largest funds are more conservative, but on average they still have around 16% in private capital vs 35% in listed. Global family offices are similar, with 18% in private equity and 35% in listed equities. ASSET ALLOCATION OF MAJOR LONG-TERM INVESTORS In all three cases above, total allocation to equities is between 48% and 53%, but it is the mix between listed and unlisted that varies significantly. In terms of performance, the Yale Endowment has outperformed average endowments over the 5, 10, 15 and 20 year time horizons, outperformed the average family office over any period measured, and outperformed the traditional 60/40 portfolios by a massive 60% over the past 20 years (ie, a 13.1% vs 8.8% CAGR). This outperformance started many years ago, long before the digital age we live in today. The rapid rise in valuations of unlisted digital companies has extended the outperformance of the leading investors that favour unlisted over listed shares. Despite this, many large financial-service organisations and large asset allocators continue to insist on old-school asset-allocation methodologies 60% investment into listed equities, with heavy trading as the backbone of value creation. This methodology died a painful death many years ago! THE STRONGEST REASON TO INVEST IN UNLISTED EQUITIES Each of the major technology-driven revolutions of the past 200 years has created, and destroyed, enormous wealth: the industrial revolution spawning machines and factories starting 1771; the age of steam and coal, iron and railways starting 1829; steel electricity and heavy engineering from 1875; and the age of oil, the automobile and mass production in 1908 _. In fact, the rise of the US as the world s dominant economic superpower came about because it encouraged free capital and entrepreneurism right in the middle of the Industrial Revolution. Attracting entrepreneurial talent, enabling free movement of capital and investing in its manufacturing capacity led to the US overtaking Britain as the world superpower. 3

The digital revolution will not be any different. The implications of the digital technology revolution for investors are significant, particularly when coming at a time of vulnerability for traditional companies as the global economy slows and the new disruptors take over. We did not have Uber, AirBNB, Netflix, Alibaba or Spotify ten years ago. In fact, there weren t smartphones, smart cars, smart fridges, smart light bulbs or smart clothes, let alone microwaves that recorded discussions and take photos ( ). We have not seen the best of this yet. The technology disruptors will change some of the world s oldest industries over the next ten years: crop yields are expected to increase by 25% using technology that combines trillions of soil observations and predicting where to plant what type and volume of crop; Auto manufacturers will derive nearly half their income from selling data gathered from the connected cars that move one billion people every single day from home to work, to shops, to recreation, to a billion different places to buy a billion different things; Uber itself could get disrupted when autonomous cars supplant Uber drivers and earn the owning family extra income when they aren t being used, and by keeping cars in operation all day, further eliminating the need for an estimated 90% of expensive city carparks And that s before we consider the impact of virtual personal assistants, energy storage, connected home, brain-computer interface, human augmentation, 3D Bio-printing systems, smart robots, smart advisors, the sharing economy, speech to speech translation, internet of things (market size growing from $1.9tr today to $7.1tr by 2020), wearable user interfaces, consumer 3D printing, cryptocurrencies, content analytics, augmented reality, 3D scanners, or speech recognition. CONCLUSION: 3 TOP REASONS FOR HOLDING UNLISTED EQUITIES (AND THE ONE MAJOR REASON NOT TO) There are three core reasons for including unlisted equities, particularly Venture Capital, in your portfolio: 1. Listed equity markets have become overcrowded, pushing down returns and pushing up volatility; 2. Listed and unlisted equities are actually driven by the same fundamental economic factors, so limited the universe of equities considered is detrimental; 3. Unlisted markets provide far greater access to many of the digital technology sectors The major reason not to invest: liquidity, or more specifically the lack thereof. Unlisted shares are not for investors that need access to all of the capital all of the time. That s why they tend to be the domain of high net worth families, pension and endowment funds. Global economic growth overall is expected to be low, muting total equity market returns. That makes the current global environment much better suited to high conviction strategies, and as shown above, in today s market this must include unlisted equities. For investors the challenge is how to ensure that they have a positive economic exposure to these innovations, not just the negative impact of holding shares in the companies being disrupted. From this dizzying array of impacts on the way we lead our lives, and therefore on the global economy, it is easy to see why humans tend to underestimate long-term impacts: the implications of big changes are well beyond the majority of people to predict. But that 4

shouldn t mean that good advice doesn t take into account the possibilities, because it is by understanding these possibilities that real wealth can be created. ALL SAID AND DONE, WHAT S NEXT? There is a clear need to have an investment allocation to non-listed private companies. There are, however, hundreds of VC s, PE Companies, angel investment clubs, investment aggregators and so on all in search for a Holy Grail unlisted private company. Identifying which company, or which VC or PE firm, to invest in is complicated and will get significantly more so as the private investments segment matures. At Crossinvest, our team of investment professionals is continually searching for investment ideas and deals in the unlisted private-equity space. Our fundamental objective is to offer our family of investor clients an opportunity to invest in private companies that are likely to have far-reaching impact in shaping the future. At Crossinvest, we aim to break down the world of private-equity investment complexities into simplified investment solutions. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT US ON CROSSINVEST.COM.SG // +65 6220 9339 1. Carlota Perez, Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages, 2003 DISCLAIMER Certain statements contained within the information in this Crossinvest Thought Leadership white paper, may be statements of future expectations and other forward-looking statements. These statements involve subjective judgement and analysis and may be based on third party sources and are subject to significant known and unknown uncertainties, risks and contingencies outside the control of Crossinvest (Asia) Pte Ltd, which may cause actual results to vary materially from those expressed or implied by these forward looking statements. Forward-looking statements contained in the information regarding past trends or activities should not be taken as a representation that such trends or activities will continue in the future. Opinions expressed are present opinions only and are subject to change without further notice. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein. There is no obligation to update, modify or amend the information or to otherwise notify the recipient if information, opinion, projection, forward-looking statement, forecast or estimate set forth herein, changes or subsequently becomes inaccurate. Crossinvest (Asia) Pte Ltd shall not have any liability, contingent or otherwise, to any user of the information or to third parties, or any responsibility whatsoever, for the correctness, quality, accuracy, timeliness, pricing, reliability, performance or completeness of the information. 5