"Insights, Reflections, and Lessons from the Frontlines, Intermediates and Beginners in the Venture Capital World."

Author: VC Musings

  • The Digital “Gold Rush”!

    Musings of an Intern

    28/11/24

    Dear Diary,

    I was up all night yesterday, mesmerized by all the various memecoins. Seriously….what is this “ChillGuy” token? Market Cap of 435 MILLION dollars with a equally large trading volume in the past 24 hours. What’s more is that in the past 5 days, the coin went up 266,000%. I could have been a millionaire, instead I was busy watching the new season of Outer Banks on Netflix.

    Like don’t get me wrong, I am not a complete newbie to all these digital coins. I have been dipping my fingers into some of these virtual pools and picking up some of them to keep for myself. These decentralised virtual assets have been wrecking a chaos on me though. From the Sam-Bankman Fried scandal causing the FTX crash to Chinese and American crypto “whales” that move markets in seconds. Price manipulations are occurring left and right, and I am the small fish left there to drown. Crypto is such a gamble, do I really want to take this risk…

    Cryptocurrencies and memecoins have also gained so much traction since the recent elections and there are overnight millionaires being made regularly. There is so much money to be earned in this ecosystem, billions upon billions are being poured in and I think despite the risks there is much to be gained.  I mean how is that in our reality the 7th largest cryptocurrency is a memecoin called DOGE. The community of memecoins is a volatile yet passionate one. Whilst Bitcoin or Ethereum, were created with an actual financial utility in mind, memecoins are made cheaply and often marketed and the communities are fostered in order to grow and manipulate its value.  The beloved DOGE coin for example is mentioned in high frequency by Elon Musk, the richest man of today, boosting its value tremendously. Other memecoins like “ChillGuy” or “Grumpy Cat” are simply a marketing wonder, tapping into the absurdity of the internet’s meme culture. Often times, it is an inside joke from Tik Tok or Reddit, and the more you’re in on it, the more likely you are to toss in a couple of bucks to see if it pays off. The meme economy is a real thing.

    So with all these thinking and going back and forth on this today, I have decided maybe I will gamble off my money sometimes but not much. I will skip a Starbucks drink here and there, maybe I will get lucky or maybe I will laugh at myself. Most importantly I will keep a balance, try not to get caught up in making a quick buck and stay in the loop. One of these nights I will hop on a discord call with my friends, grab some popcorn, open tabs for DexScreener, Reddit, Twitter, Phantom, and Telegram, while saying ” xxx to the MOONN!” But tonight, I will just get all snugly and watch my Outer Banks on Netflix.

  • The Origin

    Musings of a VC founder

    28/11/2024

    Dear Diary,

    It is one of those countless sleepless night I am having since the founding of our firm. While we are never in better shape than now, I still feel the “slaps on my face” when we get rejections from co-investment schemes (to be fair, we do not have a lot of dry powder at the moment), getting snide remarks as an “investment club” that is not serious and doing things for fun (what?!) and ultimately paled in comparison to our monied peers who caught the rising wave of the industry earlier and had their representative investment successes through the rise of regional unicorns.

    We entered into the fifth year since the founding of our firm. While we projected this year to be the year where our fund management firm’s revenue (not inclusive of carry) would finally match our expenses, we still missed our target, albeit, we remain healthily cash flow positive.

    The founding team came from the same department in the same organisation within the leading IHL in Singapore. We are very different individuals. “One is a veteran in the scene, with more than 19 years of experience under his belt (now 24 years), seen the nascent growth of a fledgling VC industry took shape and was instrumental in mentoring some of the household names among startups in Singapore and the region. “Two came with corporate restructuring (as a lawyer and while working in a listco), general corporate management (at a listco), corporate finance (in private equity), fund management (private equity) and lawyering background who had at one point provided legal services to 30-40% of the VC fund management firms in the region. “Three came equipped with engineering optimisation background, armed with a systematic approach to dissecting various aspects of businesses to optimise for results. “Four came with a reputation of being everybody’s friend, likeable and agreeable in every way and had some years of VC fund investing and startup mentoring exposure through shadowing his father’s work as a LP in a famed VC Fund of Funds.

    As active participants in the startup scene, our team has witnessed improbable startup miracles and have seen our fair share of startups with great promises crumbled. We thought we know something about picking the right horses, perhaps we really do, since our team’s track record prior to founding our own firm stands at 50% success rate for seed stage startups and more than 75% success rate for startups raising Series A and above. Our secret sauces: (1) “It takes a village to raise a child approach” where we find many industry friends and supporters to provide market access, first contracts and sometimes even key hires to the startups; and (2) building trust and rapport with founders so that we could make critical intervention when required through the help of our industry network. 

    We started our VC firm thinking we could translate the goodwill and relationships we had cultivated with investors and various institutions from our respective work stints at an IHL in Singapore focusing on nurturing and investing in startups. We couldn’t be more wrong.

    Weeks before COVID-19 took the world by storm, we resigned from the comforts of our beloved workplace where many memories were forged, where we soldiered on, fighting the good fight among many student entrepreneurs. In a little badly lit dingy little office room we set up base at (Midview City), we received news on all US$15M pre-commitment pulled out from the fund just before we entered into lockdown in Singapore. To be fair, such commitments were secured too quickly (a little too fast to be true?), i.e. through 2 trips made by “Two” to link up with his monied friends from China and Hong Kong with term sheets signed. Worst, our landlord sold his office unit and we had 1 week to vacate the room.

    Most among us were ready to throw in the towel and call it a day. “Two’s” career has been riddled with obstacles and near impossible challenges throughout and thought such setbacks are only normal and more will come. He encouraged and probably some would say, coaxed everyone to forge on. (to be continued…)