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Title: 

Informational Hold-up and Performance Persistence in Venture Capital

Authors: Hochberg, Yael V.
Ljungqvist, Alexander
Vissing-Jorgensen, Annette
Issue Date: 12-Dec-2011
Series/Report no.: FIN-11-015
Abstract: Why don't successful venture capitalists eliminate excess demand for their follow-on funds by aggressively raising their performance fees? We propose a theory of learning that leads to informational hold-up in the VC market. Investors in a fund learn whether the VC has skill or was lucky, whereas potential outside investors only observe returns. This gives the VC's current investors hold-up power when the VC raises his next fund: Without their backing, he cannot persuade anyone else to fund him, since outside investors would interpret the lack of backing as a sign that his skill is low. This hold-up power diminishes the VC's ability to increase fees in line with performance. The model provides a rationale for the persistence in after-fee returns documented by Kaplan and Schoar (2005) and predicts low expected returns among first-time funds, persistence in investors from fund to fund, and over-subscription in follow-on funds raised by successful VCs. Empirical evidence from a large sample of U.S. VC funds raised between 1980 and 2006 is consistent with these predictions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/31348
Appears in Collections:Finance Working Papers

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