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Investment Round-up

This is a week to cherry-pick, as the number of investment rounds that have completed is significant – which means we can focus those that really piqued our interest. Here are the deals that caught our eye:

  • Equity investment into smaller UK businesses grew by 9 per cent last year. That equates to £8.8bn of new money into our small-business economy
  • Axial Capital joined (and successfully closed) and the pre-IPO round for the September public listing of RXLive
  • A government taskforce has urged Boris Johnson to shed a range of UK regulations on investment to unlock more than £100bn of capital to flow into smaller UK businesses by allowing pension funds to invest in earlier stage (and therefore riskier) growth companies
  • French fintech startup Pennylane has secured €15 million in funding to grow its array of bookeeping and financial management tools
  • Upflow, a Paris-based startup that helps B2B companies get paid, has raised $15 million in a Series A funding round
  • MyYogaTeacher closed on $3 million in seed funding to tap into the in-home fitness industry that gained traction in the past year. MyYogaTeacher’s app streams interactive lessons directly to students in the U.S. from more than 120 experienced teachers in India

Cobots. Your new day-job.

We’re big supporters of the efficiencies of automation, but the human side of me likes to see a future for people in the workplace. In a world of nearly 8bn people we don’t need so many idle hands. Cue the cobots, for augmented collaboration that might make an appearance in your workplace sooner than you think.


Current trends in automation are accelerating the adoption of robotic technologies, down to even the most mundane roles in the workplace (for many that might be something to be pleased about).  The global robotics sector is rapidly shifting its focus toward more accessible robots-as-a-service (RaaS) solutions which can solve the ‘last mile of automation’ problem for medium and even smaller enterprises. Because robots have been unable to usurp humans from that last mile (also something we humans might be pleased about), the focus has now turned to human-robot cooperation.


Unlike the super-human robots of a typical feature film, displacing us from our our jobs (and possibly more than that, if we let Hollywood tell the story) cobots are designed to operate in close proximity to humans, in a direct symbiotic partnership to perform tasks. They are intentionally built to physically interact with humans within a shared workspace. They are designed to augment and enhance human capabilities with increased strength, precision, and data capabilities so that together we can can do more.  In practical terms that allows us humans not only to keep our jobs, but to do them better and with reduced physical and mental stress wherever possible.


Wherever you stand on the subject, the reality is that robots, and cobots, will be with us for the long term and will be the increasingly the beneficiary of investment capital – including ours, as we appraise candidates for investment through the remainder of the year.


July 23rd Investment Round-up

Investment roundup – a few that caught our attention this week in sectors we really like:


– Collectiv Food, the London based direct-to-producer platform that connects food producers directly with customers like restaurants and hotels has raised £12 million in its Series A growth round


– Sales Impact Academy is a go-to-market learning platform providing a continuous live learning solution for management, leadership and revenue operations for high-growth technology companies. This week they took in $4m in funding


– ClexBio, an Oslo based startup developing bio-engineered human blood vessels for transplant secured US$2.2m in seed funding


– Clim8 Invest, an app that helps Brits invest in publicly listed companies and funds focused on tackling the climate crisis, Greentech and Cleantech, has raised £1.26m in growth capital

Capital for your venture, without the VC.

When your business has traction, and perhaps growth is outstripping the capacity of your working capital, that’s when business owners might turn to investment funding to provide enough financial support to push growth even harder, whilst giving profits time to catch up. So often when a business in this scenario approaches us for advice and investment, the question is asked ‘how much equity do I give away’?


Across the globe this is a common theme for anyone scaling up their business, and in western countries at least there has been a recent shift that has allowed for augmentation of the typical investment model – by way of government underwritten loans and grants on a scale not seen before.


In many cases businesses found themselves with sudden and easy access to bank loans that had previously been out of reach for all but the most mature businesses. Added into the mix was various match-funding initiatives (such as the Future Fund in the UK), and that meant a fairly conservative investment raise could result a substantial wind fall in real terms once the government added their contribution to the kitty – the resulting risk mitigation put all parties in a position to agree (or at least negotiate) that less equity needed to be carved out in the process. This is an investment model we have long advocated, well before the free flowing government money, so it’s a welcome shift in dynamics.


An example of how far a well planned piece of structured funding can go is the extended reality data start-up, BadVR. When they learned that one of their core corporate partners, Magic Leap, was about to shed 1,000 jobs BadVR was unfazed. Despite the fundamental ties that saw BadVR positioned as an enterprise application on the Magic Leap platform, the startup saw it as an opportunity to pivot away from reliance upon consumer-focused apps. Still, this required funding to ride out the transition.


The first step was to access money from one of the government’s business support schemes, to bolster working capital and maintain headcount. Eventually, the company managed to land additional financing in the form of a grant from the National Science Foundation.


What the Magic Leap story shows is that companies don’t necessarily need to take on fully loaded venture capital to make it. Indeed, as costs come down through remote working, and with the gig economy offering democratised access to all the necessary engineering talent, thrifty startups have been able to source much of the capital they need from government sources and corporate innovation grants, giving away much less equity in the process. That’s how BadVR ultimately got hold of roughly three million in funding.


Many entrepreneurs consider fundraising to be the first and most crucial step to starting a business. And a quick online search will give credence to this overcooked viewpoint – there’s no shortage of articles out there about how to raise large amounts of money for your startup (though I add a caveat that it’s typically rapidly growing startups with proven market traction that attract much of that investment, highlighting the point that it indeed shouldn’t be the very first thing you devote time to).


But the notion that you need to fundraise at all can be misleading.


In many ways, fundraising is actually antithetical to the entrepreneurial ethos as it can limit your freedoms to build the kind of company you want – if you’re faced with giving away a substantial amount of your company in return for funding. And there are other ways to get your company off the ground, where the equity you give away can be greatly reduced. Often when we place funding into companies we can take comfort in the fast growing revenues that the company is generating, and the market penetration they’ve achieved, meaning we can offer hybrid funding models that leave founders with a greater equity share – which they can retain for future value, or hold in the cap table for follow-on funding rounds at a higher valuation.


Here’s a point for consideration: entrepreneurship is fundamentally about freedom.


I’ve heard it said that “if I borrow money from a friend, I have to pay him back eventually. And I’ll be thinking about it until I do, because I know he’s counting on it. The same thing happens when you borrow investor money”.


Most entrepreneurs found themselves in business because they felt constrained by being tied to their boss or their boss’s company. They had an original idea they wanted to pursue without being tied down by someone else’s rules. When you take in money from a VC you might find this is similar to being governed by your former CEO, and you might lose some of that freedom. On the flipside, you pick up the support of additional minds and experience that might open doors to really propel your business to new heights – so weighing up the pros and cons in relation to your objectives sits at the heart of the fund raising process.


When you’re dependent on investors, eventually, your company might stop looking like the company you started, and there’s not much you can do about it. This may be because investors opened doors for you that you hadn’t considered possible, but it may also be because the investment board had influence and ambition that’s not entirely aligned with your original plans.


Also consider that if you’re too focused on fundraising, you might be overlooking what’s most important. Entrepreneurs often find that by focusing on what really matters – that is, what you’re selling and the customers you’re serving – the money comes to you. As an entrepreneur, you have to be self-sufficient.


As a final thought, it could be said that the goal of entrepreneurship is to become a business owner by building a product or service that lasts for years, even decades and beyond. This is what separates the true entrepreneurs from those who simply own a business. Keeping your ambition aligned more closely to this notion, and less to the single goal of raising as much money as you can, does much to separate you from the rest of the crowd.

Coffee with a fund manager

At recent catch-up-over-coffee mornings with a couple of the fund managers we work with, the topic of conversation pivoted around corporate private equity at our advisory arm, and real estate developments of varying types. The travel across town to take my seat at the table affords time to read the business pages in the day’s paper – and to gauge whether news from the coffee table runs either in parallel or in contrast with the editorials of the day. After all, every paper will report its quota of economic and financial malaise!

Positively, the drive of those funds to deploy into new investments is still as strong ever, which aligns with the interest we continue to enjoy from investors taking part in the current opportunities at Axial Capital. Granted the positivity will be more lacklustre in some sectors as compared with others (if you’d co-invested with Mike Ashley in Debenhams your stock ticker may not inspire too much confidence at this point..). The point being that, whilst negative headlines continue to hold their share of newspaper square inches, coffee with an active fund manager now and then continues puts a positive light on the general economic undercurrent.

My view is partly driven by the current political position of the UK (and to some degree the EU and US), which here at home is as much in the doldrums as its ever been, but still GDP is forecast to grow marginally in the coming years and unemployment remains at record lows – and with new projects continuing to launch with positive interest from joint venture partners and investors alike, it suggests to me that we’re a robust society that will ultimately keep the UK on track in the long term. And that’s something to be upbeat about!
 

On the property front, recent figures show that remortgaging is running well above average, suggesting people are staying invested in their assets, and first time buyers are taking out mortgages at a level that outweighs movers and downsizers. With the Winter lull at an end there was an uptick last month in general SE property sales, and exceptional spurts continued to appear in some of the regional cities. The bottom line is that everyone fundamentally wants to carry on with their lives, their businesses, and their investments, and when I read tomorrow’s downbeat headlines I’ll take comfort that there are just as many good headlines!

Funding the bridging lenders, wholesale

A day at the Finance Professionals conference recently reconnected me with a bridging lender we’d previously discussed providing wholesale funding for. For most bridge lenders in the market, their loan book is built by their own funds or with funds from their immediate investor network – and this often has limits on the availability of funds for the continual growth of the loan book. Ideally, a lender can access the wholesale funding market for an institutional credit line, just as we’re advising on for this current bridge lender.

Our institutional funding network has remained in strong support of bridging and development lenders – as well as B2B lenders – as long as we can demonstrate a well managed and sensibly leveraged loan book. Ultimately no institution wants to be over-exposed, so we work with bridge lenders to help shape their loan book for the most attractive terms for wholesale funding.

Implicit in procuring an institutional funding line for any lender – whether that’s for a bridge lending, corporate lending, or another provider in the general lending space – is allowing for future growth beyond the initial credit line and considering how to address risk if the preferred facility is capped or rescinded in the future. Where we advise on these scenarios we look at options for a suitable restructuring of the loan book to make it possible to access more than a type of credit line. Ultimately it’s about future-proofing sustainable growth of the loan book.

For institutional and corporate advisory inquiries call or email us and we will arrange to meet and discuss your business further

Lockdown shopping = millions in investment

A few months ago we saw the headlines that the online local supermarket service Weezy raised £15m in their series A, and in the recent week Turkey-based Getir raised substantially more to become (yet another) unicorn in the sector. There’s no question that fast-scaling service oriented companies will be ongoing beneficiaries of investment in the months and years ahead.


An investment we recently evaluated at Axial Capital is gaining ground in this space, though not in the UK market. AOW is the brain-child of an American ex banker who is now firmly rooted in Thailand and expanding his on-demand and ‘online only’ grocery service across Asia. Dressed up as a supermarket service, these businesses are ultimately logistics plays and it’s the Amazon-like technology and distribution network that serve as the driver of value and defensibility. Plus enough capital to make a quick run at securing market share of course.


Fairly simple at conceptual level – select your chosen items on an app and shortly after have a bicycle delivery rider arrive at your door – scaleup businesses in these virtual convenience sectors are adding another line to the national output ledger, and creating jobs where more redundant sectors are inevitably trimming back headcount, at the same time as giving you and I the ability to redefine how we operate on a personal level. We see a positive period of evolution ahead, something we’re excited about.

Investment Exits a la Covid

At times of high economic uncertainty, investment activity and property development can stall as buyers retreat to the sidelines looking for bargains, while sellers are reluctant to ink a deal that may look cheap ‘if’ the market out-performs in 2021. 


COVID-19 created both unprecedented uncertainty and practical obstacles to dealmaking. Global lockdowns suddenly meant it was impossible to meet in person, develop relationships or to kick the tyres of a business and get a feel for its people, culture and operations. Despite all this, when the strategic rationale is strong and a target performs well, attractive exits can still be achieved. 


We can look at two distinctly different investments to illustrate the impact and the opportunities: a real estate development, and a SaaS enterprise scale-up. Let’s start with the SaaS business, a cloud-based HR engagement and performance software package, that experienced an unexpected growth curve as employment and working models saw a dynamic shift in 2020.


They say it takes 66 days for a habit to form. As a society we’ve had much more time than that to adapt to working or running businesses in the Covid environment, and this led to greater adaptation and utilisation of software – including HR management packages. Similar to the story of Zoom, valuations have seen an uptick for software packages that provide structure and simplicity to the currently fragmented working model.


Timing and the investment horizon were evaluated in the usual course when the VC backers of Clear Review funded the SaaS HR firm on its A Round. But when a strategic acquisition by Advanced, the UK’s third largest software company, was presented as a profitable and chance exit, that exit came early. And at the stellar level of 75% IRR for the VC. Many firms and funds have been dealt a blow by covid, by way of some portfolio companies running at full burn-rate but seeing their market take-up abruptly halted, but the right positioning can have quite the opposite result.


Looking at the dynamic shift from another perspective, structured finance to support residential property development must be taken with both a long and short view on the impacts of covid. In the short term there is uncertainty in the market and those with good experience of sourcing and developing good land sites are able to capitalise on the current opportunities. By the very nature of building and selling real estate the horizon to completion and exit is at least a medium term out look – by which time all parties to the project should expect that economic volatility in the UK is less uncertain, and demand for housing will not have subsided. This is exactly what we’re seeing currently, with our network of investors showing strong support for those developers who present a strong property development proposition.


Whilst existing plans to build businesses over longer periods, to be positioned as a strategic target for a larger consolidators in the marketplace, the pandemic had rapidly accelerated and refocused many sectors and has created opportunities for attractive exits, much earlier than envisaged. We may all be indoors this month, but there’s a silver lining of optimism out there.

Using Revolving Credit when expanding your business

Experiencing consistent or even rapid growth can be a challenge for a business operator, as counter-intuitive as that may sound to many, which is where an RCF (revolving credit) can offer a pillar of flexibility in your finance model. We have used RCF’s for clients who have approached us simply to fund the growth they’re experiencing, and where we have led clients through buyouts the RCF has been just as useful in the underlying capital raise. To understand why, we can look at some characteristics of such a credit line.


 

To get the greatest value from a flexible revolver, it works particularly well where a business trades with a regular and reliable customer base, and for growth to be consistent across that customer base. In part, this is because the facility can scale as your level of trading scales, which means your cost of finance is kept in line with the size of your business.
 

We have used this type of money in a variety of situations, including on a buyout of a wholesale company trading at £30m, and to fund growth for a food commodities supplier (we placed private investment in combination with the RCF) trading at sub one million – I make this contrast of business types to illustrate the broad application of this type of money in business expansion.
 

Essentially the RCF is a credit line that lets you draw down capital as trading volumes dictate, and it increases in line with that upward trend in trading, meaning your cost of money increases only when your revenues are growing. That growth can arise more traditionally from organic expansion, though we also deploy RCF funds into leveraged buyouts and structured refinancing when a client is perhaps raising investment from us or needing to re-price their current lending onto better terms.
 

With business sectors being reshaped in 2020 to a degree we’ve not seen for many years, consolidation and restructuring is on the increase, with expansion and acquisition opportunities becoming more ever-present as we move through Q3-Q4. For those businesses looking to take advantage of this Axial Capital is actively placing funds through the remainder of the year where your business proposition is sound. You can submit your deck or funding requirement via email (ventures@axialcapital.co.uk) or through the website directly in the Contact section.

Venture financing reaches an all-time high for Q1

2021 is shaping up to be a stellar year for fast-growth companies in Europe. Investment into European growth companies reached almost EUR20 billion in the first quarter, roughly double any quarter of 2020. Funding at every stage was up, with late-stage funding growing the most.


Whilst we’re not great supporters of ‘unicorn hunting’, as there’s a plethora of brilliant, innovative businesses out there that will achieve great success without the coveted billion valuation, new unicorn counts in Europe grew all the same. A record-setting 16 new unicorns were coined in a single quarter. In the whole of 2020 just 15 new European unicorns joined the unicorn board.


These current numbers account for 11 percent of all unicorns globally, and the amount of capital raised in the first quarter was more than EUR7 billion.


Early-stage funding  is also at an all-time high for European startups, with total volume up 62 percent on the same quarter last year. The number of early-stage growth companies that received funding was also up, indicating that it’s not just the select few chart-toppers receiving the bulk of the money. The capital markets remain strong, and for companies with a good track record of growth that capital is more accessible than ever.


UK/Europe-based medical and biotech companies have had a good start to the year, with some significant transactions in the digital health and bio/pharma sectors. At Axial Capital we are completing A rounds and pre-IPO financing rounds for two growth companies in the MedTech space, with buy-in from the UK/EU and from North America remaining strong.


Q2 is under way at a good pace, and the good run for innovative growth companies looks set to continue!


A look at investment in 2020. It’s not just about money.

2019 saw a shape-shift at many points across the innovation and investment spectrum, and the year
ahead already looks to be moving toward more of the same. In the world of fledgling enterprise it can be difficult to meet the costs of getting established in a financial centre such as London, and equally difficult to attract funding for growth if you’re not present and visible in such a centre. Investment houses have become increasingly savvy to this, however. So where will this lead us in 2020?


 

In our VC network we have seen an increasing emergence of region-specific funds, with a focus on taking money and business expertise outside of London and delivering it to entrepreneurs beyond the borders of the ‘Silicon Roundabout’. A case-in-point is a newly launched East-England fund with £100 million ring-fenced for management teams of proven, growing businesses who can demonstrate a road-map of impressive milestones ahead of them. The fund is structured on a patient capital basis to allow those milestones to be fostered and developed to their greatest potential, without the pressure of a defined short-term return-of-capital, and without the need for the business and its team members (often with families and other local responsibilities) to relocate to London. This is an impressive step in the right direction in our opinion.


 

On the same token, founders of young businesses aren’t necessarily making a bee-line for London in the new decade, and they don’t always see value in giving away a controlling stake early on if they can raise funds from their existing network – or if they can boot strap the old fashioned way and recycle profits into their growth ambitions. With an increasing number of quality, invest-able businesses exploring these other avenues for funding it has led firms like ours to put more focus on the benefits
of keeping businesses local. And this shift toward regional fund allocation is a positive off-shoot of this.


 

The title of this article reminds us that it’s not always about money, though. Just as pertinent in a decade that could shape up to be one of greater awareness is the focus on social impact investing. And one of these caught our attention this month. Great strides have been taken by the Trillion Trees Campaign (previously the Billion Trees Campaign until they blitzed through that target), a planet-focused tree planting programme that recently published startling evidence from ETH Zurich University showing that the effects of a decade’s worth of carbon emissions could broadly be reversed if the target number of trees are planted across the world. That number, one trillion. As Axial Capital continues into 2020 with a focus on companies and entrepreneurs that are looking for growth capital and strategic investment guidance, we will also remain conscious of investment choices in our new world.


 

The title of this article reminds us that it’s not always about money, though. Just as pertinent in a decade that could shape up to be one of greater awareness is the focus on social impact investing. And one of these caught our attention this month. Great strides have been taken by the Trillion Trees Campaign (previously the Billion Trees Campaign until they blitzed through that target), a planet-focused tree planting programme that recently published startling evidence from ETH Zurich University showing that the effects of a decade’s worth of carbon emissions could broadly be reversed if the target number of trees are planted across the world. That number, one trillion. As Axial Capital continues into 2020 with a focus on companies and entrepreneurs that are looking for growth capital and strategic investment guidance, we will also remain conscious of investment choices in our new world.

Putting capital together for property developers

Increasingly when we structure a finance solution for property developers at £2m+ we are drawing on our equity partners to get the client across the line on the overall project funding.
 

As much as people may tout 100% finance (and yes, this is possible – if a very thorough business case is made), the reality is that any investor would prefer to see a developer make some show of financial involvement (just a few percent in many cases) to build a partnership for doing more business together in the future. And this is how we approach business when we source funds for developers – which has had the positive effect of bringing more funding partners to engage with us.
 

The right capital stack is about achieving balance – both in terms of returns and security for investors, and in terms affordability on the cost on the money overall – and we’re seeing this being achieved for more and more developers on some really great developments.