Robots – Are You Investing Like the Terminator? You Should Be!

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Are You Investing Like the Terminator? You Should Be!

When robots eventually take over this planet killing us all, save a small group singled out to be used as slaves, and thrown into a big brother style environment with live streamed cage fights to the death or possibly used in lab tests, you can bet on it that they won’t feel bad about it. Curiosity perhaps as to why we’re acting the way we are, but no emotional baggage.

Robots follow a logical protocol and as such won’t shed a robotic tear when wiping us out. Similarly when a fellow robot is gunned down by the last remaining “resistance” group of commando types with shaved heads, tattoos, shredded abs, and sporting names such as John, Bruce, and Dutch, they won’t shed a tear but will simply carry out their logical programme.

Take a look at the Terminator. Principally, the thing is complete disengagement. Of course, you say… it’s damn robots and that’s my point.

As investors we can learn a great deal from killer robots. For just over two years I made a living trading my own capital full time and it taught me a great deal, including the different types of stress that can come with different investing and trading styles.

Investing money and trading are quite different. However, one lesson which stands tall and proud and is consistent across both worlds is that the ability to disassociate oneself with the decision making process is immensely valuable.

It’s why successful traders and investor alike all have a process. That process keeps them from letting emotional decision making get in the way. It’s the hallmark of a professional, whereas amateurs get caught up in all sorts of emotional garbage which should not come into the equation. This is very easy to do when you’re simply hitting the buy and sell button but potentially less so when investing in private deals.

Investing in private deals is far riskier since there is no liquidity so hitting the sell button isn’t an option. It is why BEFORE investing capital is the most important time of all.

Let’s assume, however, that you’ve invested in a private deal. If you’ve done it half-right you’ve ensured you have ROFR (right of first refusal) on future rounds of funding. Sometimes VC’s don’t like this but angels are taking the risk and setting the terms early on.

It also protects you from VCs being vultures and diluting you without an ability to follow on but I digress. Now, the time comes where the company in question requires additional funding.

This can take the form of 2 very different situations.

  1. The company is doing well and since you were smart in structuring a ROFR (right of first refusal) into your early investment you’re now eager to take up the opportunity to invest again and possibly invest more capital since risk has been reduced and you’re now more comfortable allocating a greater amount of capital. I know of investors who place small amounts early ensuring ROFR and then if the company fails they move on and if it gains traction and is doing well they are positioned to invest substantially more.
  2. The company has not done well and you’re not comfortable investing more money. In this instance you’ve got to have the discipline to walk away and not throw good money after bad.

In both of the above scenarios having the robot-like discipline and acting accordingly is very important.

This is not to say we lose our compassion. We wish everyone well (well, nearly everyone) but nobody is going to care more about your money than you are.

When investing in early stage private deals what we have to remember is that not every deal is going to survive. Many WILL fail!

According to a Harvard study, about 75% of U.S venture-backed start-ups fail. Now, I don’t believe that your private equity portfolio should sport a 75% failure rate if you work hard but these are the broad facts. In fact, as many as three quarters of all venture backed firms die.

bdm_chart3 Robots
Robots

Now, you may be thinking, why on earth would you invest in private businesses?

A fair question and since we spend the majority of our time investing in private deals, one I’m happy to spend some time detailing. That conversation, however, I’ll save for another day. Suffice to say that keeping your business hat on, or putting on your “Terminator” mindset of being focused is critical to success in this business.

– Chris

“Listen, and understand. That Terminator is out there. It can’t be bargained with. It can’t be reasoned with. It doesn’t feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.” – James Cameron, The Terminator

The post Are You Investing Like the Terminator? You Should Be! appeared first on Capitalist Exploits – Frontier Markets Investing, Private Equity and IPO’s.

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