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Outline. Background and motivationInvestment trends
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1. Innovation in Venture-Capital Backed Clean-Technology Firms in the UK Stuart Parris* and Pelin Demirel**
*Economics Department, The Open University, UK: s.parris@open.ac.uk
**Nottingham University Business School, UK: pelin.demirel@nottingham.ac.uk
3. Motivation Analyse the relationship between innovation and venture capital
Venture capital and innovation interlinked
Increased political emphasis on environmental issues
Growth of cleantech venture capital ($8bn, 2008)
UK – small firm innovation
Q: Is VC investment specialised towards funding innovative cleantech firms?
What type of firms?
What type of investors?
4. UK investment trends
5. Venture capital and innovation Risk vs. reward
High risk of failure
Variable returns across industries/periods
Strategies to reduce risk (staging, diversification, specialisation)
Technology gatekeeper?
Selection and value added (Florida and Kenney, 1988; Hellmann and Puri, 2002; Zook, 2002, 2004)
Spur to innovation (Kortum and Lerner, 2000)
Patenting a key investment signal in some industries (Niosi, 2003)
Funding R&D: Balance of support between R and/or D?
(Hall, 2002; Engel and Keilbach, 2007; Da Rin and Penas, 2007)
6. UK overview Finance:
Large Private Equity industry (£20bn, 2008)
Bias towards late stage investment (98% by value)
Technology aversion?
Environmental industry
Laggard in the 1980s (Martin and Wagner, 2009)
Environmental innovation from academia and SME (Cullen, 2009)
Slow diffusion of technology from MNC (Chatham House, 2009)
7. Approach Descriptive analysis of UK cleantech firms financed by VC looking at relationship between innovation and finance at:
Firm level - patentee vs.. non-patentee firms; highly cited patents vs.. non cited patents
Investor level - preference for patentee vs. non patentee firms
Network analysis - structure of investment environment with respect to investor preferences
Linking data on investment, SME firms and innovation (patents and citations)
Assumptions:
Patents are a signal of innovative activity
Citations are an indicator of innovative quality
8. Data Cleantech Networks investment database
Investment between 2001- Nov 2009
239 UK firms (HQ in UK)
$1.7bn
FAME database of UK SME
Information on turnover, headcount
Derwent patent database
Details of patents granted by UK Patent Office (1963 and September 2009)
Application and grant dates, citations, classification information (IPC)
9. Innovation landscape of VC backed firms (1) Patents
33% of firms sampled own a patent
1% own more than 25 patents
Citations
39 highly cited patents (from 471 total patents)
140 IPC classes
Citing patents from 671 IPC classes (n = 406)
Skewed distribution of all citation counts
10. Innovation landscape of VC backed firms (2) Comparison of the most common IPC classes for the highly cited patents and the citing patents
11. Are innovative firms treated differently? Patenting vs. non-patenting firms:
Much smaller turnover (£1.3m vs. £60.8m)
More VC funding (£9.8m vs. £5.3m)
More rounds (2.0 vs. 1.4)
Cited vs. non-cited patenting firms
More patents (11.7 vs. 4.8)
More rounds (2.6 vs. 1.8)
Timing
VC follows patenting/innovative effort
12. Firms
13. Are investors that support innovative firms different?
14. Investor portfolio Patentee vs. non-patentee firms
Larger investors in sector at early & late stage
Central network players
Generalist technology preference
Evidence of larger rounds for early stages only
Highly cited vs. cited patentee firms
Larger investors with higher proportion of patenting firms in portfolio
BUT no evidence of greater investment per firm
15. Investor organisation Two strategies of investors supporting patenting firms:
Diversification:
Prominent at the sector level – characteristic of the most active investors
Smaller amounts of funding for individual firms
Investment preference toward later stages
No clear technology preference, but invest in patenting firms
Concentration of firms with highly cited patents
Targeted:
Lower activity at sector level
Larger commitments to firms, especially at early stage
Engaging with patentee firms, but not highly cited patents
Working in peripheral groups covering smaller range of technologies
16. Concluding observations (1) From an innovators perspective: cleantech investors are at exploratory learning phase
Loosely defined technology area – investor led
Identified a core group of investors but a lack of technology specialisation
Main actors include: New specialist cleantech entrants, public funds and incumbent investors
Patents as an investment signal: financial rewards but with more scrutiny
Higher quality innovation not rewarded financially, and receives even more scrutiny
17. Concluding points (2) From an industry perspective (and the environment):
Innovation funded in fossil fuel and new alternative technology sectors
Patenting an investment signal – but innovation quality harder to determine
Significant investment in firms without patents – what type of firm & innovative activity?
18. Thanks for your time Email: s.parris@open.ac.uk
19. Innovation in Venture-Capital Backed Clean-Technology Firms in the UK Stuart Parris* and Pelin Demirel**
*Economics Department, The Open University, UK: s.parris@open.ac.uk
**Nottingham University Business School, UK: pelin.demirel@nottingham.ac.uk
20. Investor network coded for patent/non-patent investors, vertices scaled by total round value
21. Investor network coded for patent/non-patent investors, vertices scaled by average round value
22. Investor network coded for patent/non-patent investors, vertices scaled by first round value
23. Investor network coded for patent/non-patent investors, vertices scaled by average round value