The tech
boom could end in 1 of 3 ways
Whether you want to call it
a bubble or not, the tech
industry is booming.
At last count there were 114 privately held companies with
valuations of $1 billion or more — often called unicorns. Some, such as Uber and Airbnb, are worth tens of
billions of
dollars.
For the
tech industry, these are heady times. But economies and industries usually move
in cycles. At some point the party has to end.
Several tech industry insiders and investors were polled to find out the biggest risks that
they see out on the horizon.
Here’s what
they said:
1.
Something happens that “breaks” the sharing-economy business model
A ruling
from a little-known California
labor agency sent shockwaves through the tech sector earlier this month. The agency said
a former Uber driver should have been classified as an employee, not an
independent contractor, and that Uber owes her $4,000 for expenses.
The ruling
applied only to one woman and Uber is appealing, but it
underscored a potential vulnerability in the foundation of so-called “sharing
economy” startups. Many of these companies are expected to overtake entire
industries, premised on a business model that doesn’t involve the costs borne
by incumbent players, such as hiring full-time employees and paying for
worker’s compensation and social security.
But if
they're forced to treat their workers as employees, their cost structure could totally
change. That could potentially “break the model” for sharing economy
startups, the thinking goes.
“If you
have to make these people employees, those businesses are less valuable than
before,” says one hedge fund manager.
Other richly
valued sharing-economy companies such as Airbnb, TaskRabbit, and Lyft could
also face these kinds of sweeping regulatory or legal risks.
That said,
regulatory changes often turn out not to be as severe as expected.
In the early days
of ecommerce many people worried that the internet startups would be toast if
they had to make consumers pay a sales tax, as their brick-and-mortar
competitors did. But years after Amazon began
making consumers pay a sales tax in many US states, people are still buying stuff on the web.
Similarly, the
benefits of some of the new sharing-economy services are so great, consumer
demand will continue to be high even if prices go up as these companies have to
pass new costs along to customers.
Of course, if a
sharing-economy service is banned outright, as French
President Francois Hollande recently said Uber should be, that presents a bigger
problem.
2. Public market investors get spooked
The proliferation
of “unicorn” tech companies has to a large degree been fed by the money pouring
in from new types of investors.
These are not the
venture capitalists that typically invest in tech startups in early stages. They are hedge
funds and mutual funds hunting for big returns in a zero-interest-rate market.
But those
investors could easily get spooked by a major shock in the broader
macroeconomic or geopolitical scene — say the eruption of a major conflict, or
a sudden downturn in a major economy.
Goodwater
Capital cofounder Chi-Hua Chien lays out one possible scenario: “My guess is that some
macro shock outside of our ecosystem will be the driver of a change —
geopolitical conflict, Greece, China, ISIS, something we can't even anticipate.
When the public markets have a correction, the hedge funds and mutual funds
will see their overall portfolios decline causing their illiquid investments in
tech companies to instantly become a larger percentage of their overall
portfolio than originally targeted. At that point, I expect to see many of them
pull back from this market, focus on shoring up their public positions, and
perhaps even seek liquidity for their illiquid private company investments.”
The
flight of public market investors would not only put an end to the big
billion-dollar late-stage funding rounds, but could also have a ripple effect
on earlier funding rounds that are critical to smaller tech startups, says Jeff
Clavier, the managing partner of VC firm SofTech VC. Those at greatest risk
would be the “high-burn companies that assume that there is a lot of cash available
for top-line focused high growth.”
3. Unicorns face plant
And few companies
have a higher profile right now than the tech-industry’s unicorns, particularly
the companies with $10-billion-plus valuations like Uber, Palantir, AirBnb,
Snapchat, Pinterest, and Dropbox.
If one or two of
these beasts stumble — say, a new competitor enters the market and
undercuts them on price or they suffer a big regulatory change — the enthusiasm
for similar companies could darken.
A big IPO flop
could also cause problems.
Many tech IPOs are
priced low to ensure that the stock pops on the first day of trading. But
investor sentiment can be a fickle thing. If a high-profile tech company were
to actually trade down on its Wall Street debut, whether because of a sudden
change in investor sentiment on the company or a shifting IPO market, investors
might rethink their other tech bets.
The public markets
have proven to be harsher judges of web companies than private markets. Yelp,
Twitter, and LinkedIn have all seen their stocks get
punished in recent months as financial results and user-growth metrics have not satisfied
public market investors.
So many of the
current unicorns are thriving in a world where performance and valuations are
determined and measured differently than they would be in the public markets.
“Right now it
seems like anything related to the sharing economy gets these huge valuations.
But then you look at the real world of companies that have actually had to get
valued by the market … and it gets rocky,” says the hedge fund manager.
Happy Investing
Source : Yahoofinance
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