Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America

Structured financing solutions encompass a range of investment approaches that provide liquidity to investors without the need for a traditional equity exit event, such as a strategic sale, sale to another financial investor, or public market listing. Structuring mechanisms across the debt-to-equity spectrum determine the exit terms of the deal, therefore providing considerable downside protection to investors. Structured financing solutions are an incipient but increasingly important set of tools for investors active in Latin America to address the financing gap for companies that lack access to bank financing and are not attractive targets for traditional PE and VC players. Many investors employing these strategies are in an experimental phase, reporting new lessons learned with each deal completed. Impact investors have been among the top drivers of these structuring innovations, as they have grappled with the additional limitations associated with the straight equity model for environmental or social enterprises. However, the use of structured financing is by no means restricted to the impact investing space. Fund managers have invested USD4b in private credit deals in Latin America since 2018, more than the previous ten years combined. PE and VC investors have also increasingly employed quasi-equity and debt instruments. ACON Investments, for example, has employed mezzanine structures in several deals from its latest funds. Brazil-focused venture capital firm SP Ventures has recently begun investing from its debut venture debt fund. Growing experimentation by fund managers demonstrates the opportunity for investors across ticket sizes, strategies, and the impact-to-commercial spectrum. The structures discussed and the case studies highlighted in this report contain some of the major lessons applicable to a wide group of private capital investors in Latin America targeting certain and timely exits with consistent returns.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Sabrina Katz
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Entrepreneurship, Impact Investing, Startup, Financial Instrument, Venture Capital, G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors, L26 - Entrepreneurship, M13 - New Firms • Startups, G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies, Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003074
https://publications.iadb.org/en/structuring-exit-new-approaches-private-capital-latin-america
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-bid-node-29803
record_format koha
spelling dig-bid-node-298032021-03-03T20:19:33ZStructuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America 2021-03-03T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003074 https://publications.iadb.org/en/structuring-exit-new-approaches-private-capital-latin-america Inter-American Development Bank Entrepreneurship Impact Investing Startup Financial Instrument Venture Capital G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors L26 - Entrepreneurship M13 - New Firms • Startups G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits Structured financing solutions encompass a range of investment approaches that provide liquidity to investors without the need for a traditional equity exit event, such as a strategic sale, sale to another financial investor, or public market listing. Structuring mechanisms across the debt-to-equity spectrum determine the exit terms of the deal, therefore providing considerable downside protection to investors. Structured financing solutions are an incipient but increasingly important set of tools for investors active in Latin America to address the financing gap for companies that lack access to bank financing and are not attractive targets for traditional PE and VC players. Many investors employing these strategies are in an experimental phase, reporting new lessons learned with each deal completed. Impact investors have been among the top drivers of these structuring innovations, as they have grappled with the additional limitations associated with the straight equity model for environmental or social enterprises. However, the use of structured financing is by no means restricted to the impact investing space. Fund managers have invested USD4b in private credit deals in Latin America since 2018, more than the previous ten years combined. PE and VC investors have also increasingly employed quasi-equity and debt instruments. ACON Investments, for example, has employed mezzanine structures in several deals from its latest funds. Brazil-focused venture capital firm SP Ventures has recently begun investing from its debut venture debt fund. Growing experimentation by fund managers demonstrates the opportunity for investors across ticket sizes, strategies, and the impact-to-commercial spectrum. The structures discussed and the case studies highlighted in this report contain some of the major lessons applicable to a wide group of private capital investors in Latin America targeting certain and timely exits with consistent returns. Inter-American Development Bank Sabrina Katz Miguel Algarin Emanuel Hernandez application/pdf IDB Publications Latin America en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Entrepreneurship
Impact Investing
Startup
Financial Instrument
Venture Capital
G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors
L26 - Entrepreneurship
M13 - New Firms • Startups
G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits
Entrepreneurship
Impact Investing
Startup
Financial Instrument
Venture Capital
G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors
L26 - Entrepreneurship
M13 - New Firms • Startups
G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits
spellingShingle Entrepreneurship
Impact Investing
Startup
Financial Instrument
Venture Capital
G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors
L26 - Entrepreneurship
M13 - New Firms • Startups
G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits
Entrepreneurship
Impact Investing
Startup
Financial Instrument
Venture Capital
G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors
L26 - Entrepreneurship
M13 - New Firms • Startups
G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits
Inter-American Development Bank
Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
description Structured financing solutions encompass a range of investment approaches that provide liquidity to investors without the need for a traditional equity exit event, such as a strategic sale, sale to another financial investor, or public market listing. Structuring mechanisms across the debt-to-equity spectrum determine the exit terms of the deal, therefore providing considerable downside protection to investors. Structured financing solutions are an incipient but increasingly important set of tools for investors active in Latin America to address the financing gap for companies that lack access to bank financing and are not attractive targets for traditional PE and VC players. Many investors employing these strategies are in an experimental phase, reporting new lessons learned with each deal completed. Impact investors have been among the top drivers of these structuring innovations, as they have grappled with the additional limitations associated with the straight equity model for environmental or social enterprises. However, the use of structured financing is by no means restricted to the impact investing space. Fund managers have invested USD4b in private credit deals in Latin America since 2018, more than the previous ten years combined. PE and VC investors have also increasingly employed quasi-equity and debt instruments. ACON Investments, for example, has employed mezzanine structures in several deals from its latest funds. Brazil-focused venture capital firm SP Ventures has recently begun investing from its debut venture debt fund. Growing experimentation by fund managers demonstrates the opportunity for investors across ticket sizes, strategies, and the impact-to-commercial spectrum. The structures discussed and the case studies highlighted in this report contain some of the major lessons applicable to a wide group of private capital investors in Latin America targeting certain and timely exits with consistent returns.
author2 Sabrina Katz
author_facet Sabrina Katz
Inter-American Development Bank
topic_facet Entrepreneurship
Impact Investing
Startup
Financial Instrument
Venture Capital
G23 - Non-bank Financial Institutions • Financial Instruments • Institutional Investors
L26 - Entrepreneurship
M13 - New Firms • Startups
G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
Impact investing;entrepreneurship;Venture capital;startup financing;financial instruments;innovations in financing;structured exits
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
title_short Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
title_full Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
title_fullStr Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Structuring for Exit: New Approaches for Private Capital in Latin America
title_sort structuring for exit: new approaches for private capital in latin america
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003074
https://publications.iadb.org/en/structuring-exit-new-approaches-private-capital-latin-america
work_keys_str_mv AT interamericandevelopmentbank structuringforexitnewapproachesforprivatecapitalinlatinamerica
_version_ 1806237711634268160