The Definitive Guide to Venture Capital Fund-of-Funds (2024)

A new report by Mountside Ventures reveals and analyses what the largest Limited Partner base in Europe, Fund-of-Funds, looks for when investing in VCs.

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This week, we released our inaugural Venture Capital Fund-of-Fund (FoF) report, diving into the world of the largest Limited Partner base in Europe.

The report provides insights from 100+ global investors across 50 data points, with over £35 billion in assets under management (AUM) being deployed into VCs funds over the next 3 years. It’s the first time such a comprehensive analysis has been conducted with a focus on venture. The resulting study outlines the thesis, investment process and insights from the most common investors into VCs.

It builds upon our Capital Behind Venture Report, released in late 2020, which analysed responses from 63 Limited Partners who invest in Venture Capital (VC) funds. That report provided a first step into making the ecosystem more transparent and shedding light on best practices, preferred terms and practical advice for fund managers.

The report is published in partnership with the BVCA, Maxio and i³ investing. I would like to thank all 104 Fund-of-Funds who contributed, without whom this initiative would not have been possible.

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Our objective in publishing this guide is to increase transparency in the VC and LP ecosystem by demystifying the world of Fund-of-Funds for emerging VCs, as well as providing a guide for LPs on how their peers are investing, and what they look for.

Without Fund-of-Funds, there would be no VC scene in Europe. They continue to be a critical component of a well functioning private market given the current lack of appetite from corporates and pension funds, and are the largest pool of funding available to new managers.

Ultimately, we want to increase the likelihood of emerging fund managers successfully closing their next fund by providing them with best practices, insights on terms and practical advice.

We’ve summarised the conclusion of the report below:

  • A Fund-of-Fund (FoF) is an investment company which holds a portfolio of other investment funds such as Venture Capital (VC) funds. We segment them by generalists, VC-specific, Public, Retail and VCs. They are the largest Limited Partners (LP) investing in VCs in Europe
  • Benefits of investing in FoFs include financial returns, access to emerging managers and co-investments, diversification and education, whilst drawbacks include illiquid assets, fees and portfolio bias.
  • The report provides insights from 100+ global investors across 50 data points, with over £35 billion in assets under management (AUM) being deployed into over 700 VCs per year.
  • A FoF’s appetite to invest in VCs is driven by returns, diversification, ecosystem contributions, deal-flow and market intelligence. Track record continues to be the most important criteria when selecting funds. Around half of FoFs have restrictions in where they invest which are geographic, sector-specific or size-related.
  • 14k VC decks (in total) are screened each year, 9k VCs are interviewed, resulting in around 740 investments, representing around 5% of the population.
  • The majority of FoFs want to engage VCs as early as possible in their fundraising cycle and knew them 1–2 years before committing.
  • FoFs, like VCs, take an active role in the funds they back. They are particularly interested, in order of importance, in regular communication and reports, access to co-investment opportunities, thought leadership and a seat on the LP Advisory Committee.
  • Emerging VC Managers, as result of their sector expertise, operational track record and differentiated strategy, make up a significant proportion of a FoF’s investments. 85% had invested in that community in the last three years, with 44% of them as cornerstone investors.
  • The three biggest frustrations when VCs pitch their fund are a lack of differentiation, poor relationship building, and dishonesty.
  • Luxembourg is the preferred jurisdiction, and 4 in 10 FoFs had a restriction on the amount available to invest.
  • 1 in 4 FoFs have a requirement towards diversity investing, with women and ethnic minorities being the most sought groups after due to positive change in the ecosystem, better returns and better governance.

What is a Fund-of-Fund?

A Fund-of-Fund (FoF) is an investment company which holds a portfolio of other investment funds rather than a portfolio of companies. They are also known as multi-manager investment funds. We have identified 5 types of Fund-of-Funds involved in VC investing:

Types of FoFs

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Benefits and drawbacks of investing in a Fund-of-Fund

  • There are many benefits to investing in a Fund-of-Fund, instead of a Venture Capital fund, including access, diversification and education.
  • Challenges include selection bias in the underlying portfolio, higher management fees and investing in illiquid assets.

There is no one-size-fits-all-all with emerging managers, nor is there a consensus on how they are defined. However, funds I-III remain the most common definition of an emerging VC in the eyes of the FoF community.

Emerging Managers continue to be the largest investee base of VC Fund-of-Funds due to their sector expertise, operational track record and differentiated strategy. 85% had invested in that community in the last three years, with 44% of them as cornerstone investors.

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New and developing VC firms are consistently among the top 10 performers in the asset class, accounting for 72% of the top returning firms.

Cambridge Associates

A third of FoFs still think there are not enough opportunities to meet best-in-class VCs. This is something we’ve been addressing by running Europe’s leading LP-focused event bringing together 20 of the best emerging VC managers, and 100+ Family Offices and Limited Partners, through the Funding Venture Conference.

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There were plenty of opinions on what needs to change about the current fundraising environment and what VCs should do differently. We featured a selection of these ideas below:

Improve the regulatory environment for non-EU investors.

Jessica Archibald, Top Tier Capital

Use taxpayer money to create a more private FoF ecosystem, instead of trying to replace or distort the market.

Ertan Can, Multiple Capital

To see more emerging managers with differentiation — thesis development and unique perspectives are key.

Dario de Wet, LTV Capital

LPs share many similar frustrations to VCs, with startups. 3 themes emerged from this topic; a lack of differentiation, poor relationship-building, and not being honest.

Don’t lie to me. Be honest if there has been team turnover, if your performance doesn’t include carry, or if there are companies that might decline in value. We ultimately find out.

Their own superiority

I don’t care if you got into a deal in a round after Index invested, I care whether you were a first ticket into a company, then brought Index in to follow on

Fake commitments

We teamed up with our partners at i3 investing, who are making VC more inclusive & intersectional (people who identify as belonging to various underrepresented minority groups). Where people responded, we collected anonymised information on the people behind the funds.

At a fund level:

  • 1 in 4 FoFs have a requirement towards diversity investing, with women and ethnic minorities being the most sought groups after due to positive change in the ecosystem, better returns and better governance
  • The most common reasons for backing diverse managers were to drive: Positive change in the ecosystem through a broader range of perspectives, better returns and better governance and decision-making

At an individual level:

  • Looking at gender; 78% were men, 20% were women and 2% identified as other.
  • 16% identified as intersectional and 2% identified as LGBTQ+
  • White was the most common ethnic background, representing 83% of the respondents. Other respondents indicated they were Mixed Race, East Asian, Black and Other.
  • There was a diverse spread of countries participants were born in, with no country making up more than 15% of the responses.

When analysing fund performance for Fund-of-Fund investing in US and European VCs, the data is clear — early vintages show strong financial returns across both the top quartile, median and third quartile across the Fund-of-Fund population. Later vintages (2016 onwards) also show reasonable performances even if they are still quite early in their fund lifecycle.

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We interviewed three leading Fund-of-Funds in Europe and reproduced the Q&A in the report. Download the full report to hear what they look for in the VCs they back, what they think needs to change in the VC LP ecosystem, what they see changing as a result of tech and AI in the industry and what advice they would give to emerging fund managers.

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👉 For a deeper dive and to explore the full analysis which includes more information on what LPs are investing in, and additional insights for VCs, the report is accessible free to download here. For further fundraising resources, click here.

Collecting this information from one of the more secretive communities in the ecosystem was no easy task, so I’d love to hear from you on what you liked or thought we should improve via jonathan@mountsideventures.com.

Mountside Ventures is Europe’s leading accelerator and early-stage advisory firm, on a mission to optimise the fundraising process for founders and funds and be their first point of call.

The Definitive Guide to Venture Capital Fund-of-Funds (2024)

FAQs

How to answer the question "Why venture capital"? ›

Q: Why venture capital? A: Because you are passionate about working with startups, helping them grow, and finding promising new companies – and you prefer that to starting your own company or executing deals.

How hard is it to break into VC? ›

Jobs in Venture Capital are notoriously hard to land. They don't come by often, and they are seldom advertised—except in large VC firms, mainly for entry-level positions. Aspiring VCs often don't understand Venture Capital well enough to apply at the right type of firm, or one that is interested in their skillset.

How much money do I need to start a VC fund? ›

Fund sizes vary from a few million dollars ($5-$15 MM) for pre-seed investments to several hundred million for later-stage growth funds backed by institutional investors.

What is a venture capital fund of funds? ›

A Fund-of-Fund (FoF) is an investment company which holds a portfolio of other investment funds such as Venture Capital (VC) funds. We segment them by generalists, VC-specific, Public, Retail and VCs. They are the largest Limited Partners (LP) investing in VCs in Europe.

What is venture capital answer in one sentence? ›

Venture capital is money that is invested in projects that have a high risk of failure, but that will bring large profits if they are successful.

What is venture capital short answer? ›

Venture capital definition

Venture capital (VC) is generally used to support startups and other businesses with the potential for substantial and rapid growth. VC firms raise money from limited partners (LPs) to invest in promising startups or even larger venture funds.

How many VC firms fail? ›

There will always be money to be raised. And yet, despite all that cash flowing into VC-backed companies, twenty-five to thirty percent of them will fail.

How to get into VC with no experience? ›

If you want to break into VC but have no experience, here are five ways to start padding that resume.
  1. Learn the business. Okay, maybe this may not jump off the page of your resume. ...
  2. Join a startup. ...
  3. Try Your Hand at Investing. ...
  4. Start networking. ...
  5. Try to lock in an internship.
Sep 15, 2022

Do you need an MBA to get into VC? ›

Pre-MBA. While many VCs earn their MBA, many others join venture capital firms before getting an MBA. Most pre-MBA hires have worked in prestigious management consulting, investment banking, or operational roles within successful startups or tech companies (e.g. sales, business development, or product management).

What is the average ROI for a VC fund? ›

Based on detailed research from Cambridge Associates, the top quartile of VC funds have an average annual return ranging from 15% to 27% over the past 10 years, compared to an average of 9.9% S&P 500 return per year for each of those ten years (See the table on Page 13 of the report).

What is the average VC fee? ›

They are commonly set between 1% to 2.5%.

This fee is typically paid by limited partners (LPs) to the VC firm and is assessed regardless of the fund's performance.

What is a good return for a VC fund? ›

Top VCs are typically looking to return 3-5X+ on their entire fund to their LP investors over ~10 years. For this, they need multiple 'fund mover' outcomes in each fund, since many early-stage investments will eventually fail or return only a small % of the fund.

How do you qualify for a venture capital fund? ›

A qualifying venture capital fund is private fund with no more than 250 beneficial owners and $100 million in assets. It also must meet the statutory definition of a venture capital fund.

How do venture capital funds pay out? ›

In most funds, distributions are divided using a standard 80-and-20 arrangement in which, following a return of capital contributions to LPs, the LPs of the fund split 80% of the returns according to their ownership stake in the fund and the general partner (GP) takes home 20% of the returns in the form of carried ...

What do venture capital funds usually look out to fund? ›

A venture capital fund pools money from investors to finance early-stage startup companies. Venture funds focus on companies that have high long-term growth potential and are in need of capital to fuel their growth and development.

Why do you want to work for US venture capital? ›

Why do you want a job in VC? To answer this question, you should demonstrate a clear understanding of the industry and explain how your skills and experiences align with the demands of the role. You can also talk about your passion for innovation and your interest in startups.

Why do you want to work in venture capital fund? ›

I know why I wanted to be in Venture capital but this may not apply to you. I wanted to be at the forefront of technology, meet with great visionary tech leaders, do a bit of finance, a ton of networking, some strategy and a learn a lot of different things. I was also attracted to the deal making aspect of it.

Why do you want to consider VC as a career choice? ›

in these and even more obscure topics, and you need to be able to ask them pertinent questions. Life-long learning sounds nice, but working in a deep tech VC firm means studying literally every form of science you can think of in a supercharged way. And get paid for that.

Why are you interested in breaking into the venture capital industry? ›

Example answer: “I've been wanting to work for a venture capital firm for a long time, mainly because I'm very interested in observing young companies. I enjoy discovering how each company plans to scale and evolve and then assessing how they put their plans into practice.

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