The paradigm, part 4: Equity gap or overhang?
An entrepreneur in need for capital might be confused. In the finance industry as well as the media, two buzz words make the round: “equity gap” and “equity overhang”.
Equity gap and overhang are not two sides of a coin. In general, the term “equity overhang” refers to the gap between funds raised and funds invested and thus to a problem institutional investors are facing. The term “equity gap” is used in reference to the gap between funds required and funds invested and thus relates to a problem entrepreneurs are facing.
Based on these definitions, a first answer to the question raised in the title of this post is: both! Depending on a company’s industry, stage within the company life cycle, and amount of capital required, today’s capital seekers find themselves in one of three clusters of the graph shown on top.
The red cluster of our “private equity cube” indicates which companies typically suffer most under the equity gap. According to the OECD, these are mostly seed and early stage innovative SMEs (“ISMEs”). While figures are difficult to obtain, in the U.S., this gap is said to be around $40 billion. Within this red cluster, first and foremost, entrepreneurs requiring between 200k € and 2 m € are affected, as these amounts are too large for informal players such as business angels but too small for VCs and private equity firms (corresponding to the medium layer of the red cluster). Currently, the only cure for these young and innovative SMEs are business angel syndicates and publicly backed funds, such as CTI Invest in Switzerland or the “Enterprise Capital Funds” in the UK. But the volumes provided by these players are still way too small.
The green cluster, on the other hand, indicates which companies in need for capital are most fought over: expanding or turnaround companies requiring >2m € capital. Only players of the formal private equity industry, such as venture capital firms (“VCs”) and private equity funds, or funds of funds respectively, play in this field. As of April 2009, current figures for the U.S. indicate an aggregated overhang of $400 billion. While the numbers differ, this situation applies globally: VCs are sitting on loads of cash but for two reasons hesitate to invest - due to the economic slowdown and due to a tendency of increasing minimum deal sizes in the formal private equity industry.
But what if an entrepreneur finds himself in the white cluster? First of all: he or she will have to rely on his own funds and capital from informal investors. And three rules of thumb apply: (a) the bigger the required capital, the more difficult it will be to find FFF or angel money; (b) the riskier the business model, the more difficult; (c) the earlier in the business lifecycle, the more difficult. Thus, even white cluster companies are confronted with an equity gap, just less severe than red cluster companies.
In wrapping up posts 1 to 4 on the investor’s paradigm, it seems that market inefficiencies are the overarching problem: from an entrepreneur’s perspective, if your business does not match the preferences of formal VCs and private equity firms, and from an investor’s perspective if you do not happen to qualify as an “accredited” or “qualified” investor. In other words: the majority on both sides relies on the quality of their personal networks.

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