Daniel Schmidt’s research while affiliated with Goethe University Frankfurt and other places

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Publications (7)


Legality and Venture Governance Around the World
  • Article

January 2008

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19 Reads

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39 Citations

SSRN Electronic Journal

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Daniel Schmidt

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We analyze governance with a dataset on investments of venture capitalists in 3848 portfolio firms in 39 countries from North and South America, Europe and Asia spanning 1971-2003. We find that cross-country differences in Legality have a significant impact on the governance structure of investments in the VC industry: better laws facilitate faster deal screening and deal origination, a higher probability of syndication and a lower probability of potentially harmful co-investment, and facilitate board representation of the investor. We also show better laws reduce the probability that the investor requires periodic cash flows prior to exit, which is in conjunction with an increased probability of investment in high-tech companies.


On the Performance of Private Equity Investments: Does Market Timing Matter?

March 2004

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542 Reads

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40 Citations

SSRN Electronic Journal

This paper investigates the market timing abilities of private equity fund managers using a unique set of detailed cash-flow data. We show that investment timing has an impact on the performance of venture capital funds. Surprisingly, divestment timing has no such impact on returns. For later-staged buyout funds our analysis reveals that fund performance is not driven by market timing but is significantly related to the experience of the individual fund manager. Thus, for successful investing into more mature portfolio companies, getting access to better deal flow and managing the investment affect the resulting success of these investments. Our results complement other recent findings on the performance of private equity funds.


Private Equity-, Stock- and Mixed-Asset Portfolios: A Bootstrap Approach to Determine Performance Characteristics, Diversification Benefits and Optimal Portfolio Allocations

February 2004

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138 Reads

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24 Citations

In this article, we investigate risk return characteristics and diversification benefits when private equity is used as a portfolio component. We use a unique dataset describing 642 US-American portfolio companies with 3620 private equity investments. Information about precisely dated cash flows at the company level enables for the first time a cash flow equivalent and simultaneous investment simulation in stocks, as well as the construction of stock portfolios for benchmarking purposes. With respect to the methodology involved, we construct private equity, stock-benchmark and mixed-asset portfolios using bootstrap simulations. For the late 1990s we find a dramatic increase in the extent to which private equity outperforms stock investment. In earlier years private equity was underperforming its stock benchmarks. Within the overall class of private equity, returns on earlier private equity investment categories, like venture capital, show on average higher variations and even higher rates of failure. It is in this category in particular that high average portfolio returns are generated solely by the ability to select a few extremely well performing companies, thus compensating for lost investments. There is a high marginal diversifiable risk reduction of about 80% when the portfolio size is increased to include 15 investments. When the portfolio size is increased from 15 to 200 there are few marginal risk diversification effects on the one hand, but a large increase in managing expenditure on the other, so that an actual average portfolio size between 20 and 28 investments seems to be well balanced. We provide empirical evidence that the non-diversifiable risk that a constrained investor, who is exclusively investing in private equity, has to hold exceeds that of constrained stock investors and also the market risk. From the viewpoint of unconstrained investors with complete investment freedom, risk can be optimally reduced by constructing mixed asset portfolios. According to the various private equity subcategories analyzed, there are big differences in optimal allocations to this asset class for minimizing mixed-asset portfolio variance or maximizing performance ratios. We observe optimal portfolio weightings to be between 3% and 65%.


Legality and Venture Capital Governance Around the World

February 2004

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455 Reads

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324 Citations

Journal of Business Venturing

We analyze governance with a new dataset on investments of venture capitalists in 3848 portfolio firms in 39 countries from North and South America, Europe and Asia spanning 1971–2003. We provide evidence that cross-country differences in legality, including legal origin and accounting standards, have a significant impact on the governance structure of investments in the VC industry: better laws facilitate faster deal screening and deal origination, a higher probability of syndication and a lower probability of potentially harmful co-investment, and facilitate investor board representation of the investor. We also show that country-specific differences exist apart from legal and economic development.


Contractual Relations between European VC–Funds and Investors: The Impact of Reputation and Bargaining Power on Contractual Design

February 2003

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63 Reads

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34 Citations

SSRN Electronic Journal

The paper explores factors that influence the design of financing contracts between venture capital investors and European venture capital funds. 122 Private Placement Memoranda and 46 Partnership Agreements are investigated in respect to the use of covenant restrictions and compensation schemes. The analysis focuses on the impact of two key factors: the reputation of VC-funds and changes in the overall demand for venture capital services. We find that established funds are more severely restricted by contractual covenants. This contradicts the conventional wisdom which assumes that established market participants care more about their reputation, have less incentive to behave opportunistically and therefore need less covenant restrictions. We also find that managers of established funds are more often obliged to invest own capital alongside with investors money. We interpret this as evidence that established funds have actually less reason to care about their reputation as compared to young funds. One reason for this surprising result could be that managers of established VC funds are older and closer to retirement and therefore put less weight on the effects of their actions on future business opportunities. We also explore the effects of venture capital supply on contract design. Gompers and Lerner (1996) show that VC-funds in the US are able to reduce the number of restrictive covenants in years with high supply of venture capital and interpret this as a result of increased bargaining power by VC-funds. We do not find similar evidence for Europe. Instead, we find that VC-funds receive less base compensation and higher performance related compensation in years with strong capital inflows into the VC industry. This may be interpreted as a signal of overconfidence: Strong investor demand seems to coincide with overoptimistic expectations by fund managers which make them willing to accept higher powered incentive schemes.


Die Vertragsbeziehungen zwischen Investoren und Venture Capital-Fonds: Eine empirische Untersuchung des europäischen Venture Capital-Marktes
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2002

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594 Reads

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5 Citations

Die vorliegende empirische Studie analysiert die Vertragsgestaltung zwischen Investoren und europäischen Venture Capital-Fonds. Im Zentrum steht die Analyse der Vergütung des Fondsmanagements sowie der zum Einsatz kommenden Vertragsklauseln. Deren Ausgestaltung ist entscheidend für die Überwindung der Prinzipal-Agenten-Beziehung innewohnenden Agency-Probleme. Hierzu werden 122 Fondsprospekte sowie 46 Gesellschafterverträge von europäischen Venture Capital-Fonds ausgewertet, die in den Jahren 1996 bis 2001, der ersten großen Boomphase des europäischen Venture Capital- Marktes, aufgelegt wurden. Während die jährliche Vergütung des Fondsmanagements auf den ersten Blick sehr standardisiert erscheint, ergeben sich bei einer Barwertbetrachtung aller zu leistenden Management Fees über die gesamte Fondslaufzeit deutliche Anzeichen für Preisdifferenzierung. In Bezug auf den Einsatz von Vertragsklauseln kann eine Zunahme im Zeitablauf und mithin eine zunehmende Komplexität des Vertragsdesigns festgestellt werden. Vor dem Hintergrund der Erfahrungen aus dem US-amerikanischen Venture Capital-Markt kann diese Entwicklung jedoch noch nicht als abgeschlossen gelten. Der europäische Markt bewegt sich in Bezug auf die Verwendung vertraglicher Restriktionen auf dem Niveau, das in den USA bereits Anfang der neunziger Jahre erreicht war.

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On the performance of private equity investments: does market timing

63 Reads

This paper investigates the market timing abilities of private equity fund managers using a unique set of cash-flow data. We show that investment timing has an impact on the perform- ance of venture-capital funds. However, divestment timing has no such impact on returns. For buyout funds we reveal that performance is not driven by market timing but is significant- ly related to the experience of the individual fund manager. Thus, for successful investing into mature companies, getting access to better deal flow and managing the investment affect the resulting success. Our results complement recent findings on the performance of private equity funds.

Citations (5)


... Empirical studies that account for the virtuous effects of VC on technology entrepreneurship (TE) have focused on developed economies (Cetindamar & Kozanoglu, 2014 ). In Latin America, the few studies on the topic underline institutional weaknesses that condition such virtuous effects at a theoretical level (Bruton et al., 2009 ;Cumming et al., 2004 ), and similar results are found by the descriptive studies referred to the region (Stein & Wagner, 2019 ;Khoury et al., 2015 ). To date, there are no empirical studies that explore the relationship between VC availability and the level of TE in Latin America. ...

Reference:

Venture Capital and Technology Entrepreneurship in Latin America: A Comparative Approach
Legality and Venture Governance Around the World
  • Citing Article
  • January 2008

SSRN Electronic Journal

... These figures are consistent with the argument that fund concentration depends on valuable information rather than on the conventional/SRI-fund nature (i.e., H1). Furthermore, SRI and conventional fund managers have negative picking, timing, and return gap skills, which is consistent with previous literature (Knigge et al. 2004;Matallín-Sáez et al. 2019, among others). ...

On the Performance of Private Equity Investments: Does Market Timing Matter?
  • Citing Article
  • March 2004

SSRN Electronic Journal

... Political uncertainty also intensifies information asymmetry between VC firms and startups, making the business prospects of early-stage startups even more ambiguous (Dushnitsky & Shapira, 2010;Ruhnka & Young, 1991). High political uncertainty complicates the decision-making process of VC firms and makes investment criteria more blurred and unstable (Baker et al., 2005;Cumming et al., 2010;Nanda & Rhodes-Kropf, 2013). As illustrated in Fig. 1b, we expect that VC firms, reacting to high political uncertainty and intensified information asymmetry, tend to avoid early-stage investments, leading to a U-shaped relationship between governors' tenure and such investments. ...

Legality and Venture Capital Governance Around the World
  • Citing Article
  • February 2004

Journal of Business Venturing

... Results also show that EREITs return respond positively to stock returns in various states and conditions. Schmidt (2004) investigates risk return characteristics and diversification benefits when private equity is used as a portfolio component. Schmidt finds that private equity outperforms stock investment. ...

Private Equity-, Stock- and Mixed-Asset Portfolios: A Bootstrap Approach to Determine Performance Characteristics, Diversification Benefits and Optimal Portfolio Allocations
  • Citing Article
  • February 2004

... 6 Much of the existing research on private equity focuses on the developed economies. For example, Schmidt and Wahrenburg (2004) consider the relationship between investors and European VC-funds, considering the effects of reputation, bargaining power, and contractual design. However, recently, scholars are beginning to examine the impact of private equity on entrepreneurial activity in developing markets. ...

Contractual Relations between European VC–Funds and Investors: The Impact of Reputation and Bargaining Power on Contractual Design
  • Citing Article
  • February 2003

SSRN Electronic Journal