Indirect exposure: Venture capital and growth equity funds
Venture capital and growth equity funds rarely finance their investments with leverage and, therefore, tend to avoid the challenges associated with direct interest-rate exposure. They do, however, experience indirect impacts, primarily through shifting valuations.
To estimate what an illiquid private company is worth, it can be instructive to look at the multiples of similar publicly traded companies. One such metric, popular in the venture capital industry, is forward-revenue multiples. Figure 4 shows this metric, as applied to public companies in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) industry. Free-cash-flow-negative (FCF-) SaaS companies traded for over 20 times forward revenue in 2020 and 2021, when rates were still at historic lows. The steep rate hikes in 2022 coincided with a precipitous drop in valuations for these same companies, which now trade below five times forward-revenue estimates. While free-cash-flow-positive (FCF+) companies directionally experienced the same devaluation, the decline was less severe, highlighting the insulating effect of cash reserves on interest-rate risk.
Overall, today’s higher interest rates mean steeper discount rates and, therefore, depressed valuations. This results in increased valuation risk for companies raising subsequent rounds of financing or contemplating an initial public offering. Conversely, lower valuations often benefit venture capital and growth equity managers with new capital to deploy.