The Hunt for Unicorns. Winston Ma. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Winston Ma
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: Экономика
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119746621
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and participants in financial markets.

      One Planet hopes that more SIFs and then the general institutional investors industry will adopt the Investment Framework. Its success, interestingly, is dependent on data and technology. That's because across the industry, high-quality company-level environmental data – for example, those relating to carbon emissions and environmental impact – is still not readily available. To make informed investment decisions, institutional investors demand timely, relevant, accurate, and complete climate-related data. As such, the Investment Framework encourages SIFs to adopt agreed standards that promote the disclosure of material climate-related data. With the help of big data technology, the SIFs collectively would improve the volume, quality, and consistency of financial data to promote ESG investments effectively.

      Now the tech revolution is presenting the same mix of opportunities and risks for sovereign investors. On the one hand, investing into the high-growth tech sector can diversify their portfolios and generate superior financial returns. Given both their capital power and long-term investment horizons, they are best positioned for digital infrastructure (such as smart cities) that's critical for a sustainable global economy. On the other hand, major technological and disruptive innovations are disrupting traditional industries, putting SIFs' existing portfolio companies at risk. SIFs must act to “future-proof” their portfolios, as well as their own operating models. As will be seen in the next section, SIFs are all rushing into the digital economy revolution.

      The overall trend of the sovereign investor world is to invest in the digital future – whether existing funds seeking to facilitate a digital transformation, or new funds established with that goal from the beginning. What's interesting is that this is not a new phenomenon: the states have (always) been active in tech investments. Silicon Valley and Tel Aviv were largely the creation of the US and Israeli states. Many of the innovations we take for granted today – such as the Internet, cloud computing, and virtual reality – were fostered by state seed capital or driven by government agencies.

      The IPO to end all IPOs

      One notable change in equity markets around the world can be laid at the feet of the patient, cash-rich sovereign investors: the dramatic decline in IPOs. The Financial Times headlined 2019's 10% drop from 2018 in capital raised in public listings, with the fewest flotations for three years. The massive investments by sovereign investors, eager to gain exposure to the digital economy, have enabled these tech stars to remain private far longer than would have been possible in the past (see the detailed discussion in the next chapter).

      One result has been a dramatic drop off in IPOs; another, hefty pre-IPO valuations that are challenging for the tech giants to sustain in public markets. In the absence of patient, massive equity inflows from the sovereign investors, things may have played out quite differently. Others speculate that it was the arrival of SIFs into the market for late stage growth companies that enabled them to put off SEC scrutiny and meddlesome public shareholders, thereby shrinking public markets. Others see the mirror image, with the SIFs not as enablers but as driven to unicorns by the shrinking public markets.

      Ironically, the largest IPO of 2019 was Saudi Aramco, which topped $2 trillion in market cap briefly after its listing. Nearly $30 billion in proceeds will largely fund PIF, which has as a goal the digital transformation of the economy and has heavily funded (via Vision Fund and directly) late stage tech stars such as Uber. In 2020, the oil price war with Russia and the economic impact of the coronavirus on the Saudi economy may cause PIF to redirect more proceeds to stimulus and funding deficits. But Vision 2030, the transformative digital future, remains in its sights.

Pie chart depicts the SIFs Lead Dollar 100 billion Vision Fund.

      Data Source: FT Research 2017.

      Another case in point is the European Union, which is a latecomer to the world of sovereign investment funds and digital economy investments. With the rest of the world aggressively investing into tech ventures domestically and internationally, Europe has actually looked more like a net seller. Chinese buyers have acquired large robotics firms in Germany and Italy; in the UK, SoftBank bought the chip-maker ARM and one of its affiliates is set to bid on the UK's upcoming 5G auction. The UK's DeepMind, the AI pioneer that built the Alphago algorithm to beat the best human player in Go Chess, was sold to US Internet giant Google's parent company, Alphabet.

      For Europeans, Apple of the US (and Samsung, from South Korea) are the most popular phones. Similarly, US companies dominate digital platforms in Europe: Facebook operates the most widely used social networks, Google rules online search and advertising, and Amazon reigns over e-commerce. Cloud