GENEVA, Switzerland – Ken Lawler, founding partner with Silicon Ventures Inc., laid out his firm's innovative approach to backing chip companies with a $200 million fund, at a European executive conference organized by the Global Semiconductor Alliance (GSA), held here this week.
Recently formed Silicon Ventures intends to work with strategic investors in what Lawler calls a "balanced risk model." The model requires active involvement from the start between a potential acquirer, the entrepreneurs and the investors. A major difference from conventional venture capital funding will be that startups will only get money from the fund if it can attract a strategic sponsor who will agree the price at which to buy the company if and when agreed development milestones have been met on time. And that time will be relatively short. Lawler showed the conference spreadsheet calculations based on a 10-quarters investment period although the time will vary from company to company.
Lawler, who previously spent 17 years as a general partner at Battery Ventures, takes as his premise that the venture capital sector has now abandoned the semiconductor industry and in particular the digital fabless sector where chip development costs have become punishingly expensive. "The semiconductor ecosystem is drying up fast," he told the GSA conference delegates.
And this has happened because over the last 10 to 15 years too many semiconductor startups have taken too much money and too much time to get to market, Lawler said. But it is not just the chip development costs that are hurting the startups. The real problem is waiting for expected markets to take off, which then requires chip iterations or "doubling down" for startups to stay in the game. The big problem is "the million-dollar per month burn rate over three, five, seven years," Lawler said.
The venture capitalists have reacted to the aggregate poor return on investment and gone elsewhere. And certainly many of the market research tallies of chip startup funding activity show what Lawler described as a "countdown to oblivion." Lawler presented a chart to the GSA conference delegates a chart that showed only one semiconductor startup in North America has received Series A investment in 2012. "The data may be under-reported but the trend is clear," he told
EE Times on the sidelines of the event.
The dearth of companies being born in the semiconductor galaxy is causing concern amongst EDA companies who see chip startups as a source of seats to whom to sell their software and amongst larger chip companies as well. "The merger and acquisition opportunities are drying up for the bigger semiconductor companies," Lawler added.
Ken Lawler, founding partner with Silicon Ventures tells the GSA European Executive conference there is a way to get fabless chip companies funded. Next: Lower returns but sooner and more certain