Vintage Year

Vintage Year

The term "vintage year" refers to the milestone year in which the first influx of investment capital is delivered to a project or company. A vintage year is the milestone year in which the first significant influx of investment capital is delivered to a project or company. During a vintage year, capital may be committed by a venture capital fund, a private equity fund, an individual investor, or a combination of sources. A vintage year that occurs at the peak or bottom of a business cycle may affect the later returns on the initial investment, as the company may have been overvalued or undervalued at the time. The point in the cycle in which the business resided in during the vintage year may skew the appearance of the company’s true value, leaving room for analysis prior to making investment decisions.

A vintage year is the milestone year in which the first significant influx of investment capital is delivered to a project or company.

What Is a Vintage Year?

The term "vintage year" refers to the milestone year in which the first influx of investment capital is delivered to a project or company. This marks the moment when capital is committed by a venture capital fund, a private equity fund or a combination of sources. Investors may cite the vintage year in order to gauge a potential return on investment (ROI).

The vintage year of a private equity fund effectively launches the clock of the 10-year typical lifespan of most term PE funds.

A vintage year is the milestone year in which the first significant influx of investment capital is delivered to a project or company.
During a vintage year, capital may be committed by a venture capital fund, a private equity fund, an individual investor, or a combination of sources.
The values of companies with common vintage years, may grow or decline as a group.

Understanding Vintage Years

A vintage year that occurs at the peak or bottom of a business cycle may affect the later returns on the initial investment, as the company may have been overvalued or undervalued at the time. The vintage year provides information regarding the first moment a small business receives substantial investment capital, from one or multiple interests.

Vintage Years for Comparison

By observing the trends among other companies with the same vintage year, an overall pattern may emerge, that can be used to potentially identify economic trends at a particular point in time. If certain vintage years perform better than others, these data help investors predict the performance of other companies with identical vintage years, like those other success stories.

For example, 2014 is considered a strong vintage year with respect to crowdfunding platforms such as GoFundMe. Businesses launched through this type of infrastructure, during that time period, have shown strong growth characteristics, as a whole. Since that time, the regulatory climate regarding crowdfunding efforts has tightened, which has only served to further legitimize this activity, suggesting sustained future growth of companies, that were birthed in this manner.

Impact of Business Cycles

Most businesses experience economic shifts as a regular part of doing business. This can include seasonal fluctuations experienced by certain business, such as the increase in retail sales during the holiday season or an increase in lawn care product sales in warmer months, as well as other cycles based on the occurrence of certain events, such as major product releases.

The business cycle widely believed to systematically progress through the following four phases:

  1. Upturn
  2. Peak
  3. Decline 
  4. Recovery

During the upturn and up to the peak, the value of the company is seen to increase. During the decline and until the start of recovery, the value of that company is considered to be falling.

The point in the cycle in which the business resided in during the vintage year may skew the appearance of the company’s true value, leaving room for analysis prior to making investment decisions. During peaks in the market, new companies are more likely to be overvalued, based on the current economic outlook. This increases the expectations on an investment's return, due to the fact that larger sums of money are initially contributed.

Inversely, companies are typically undervalued during low points in the market, because less capital is initially contributed, therefore these companies or projects have less pressure to generate substantial returns.

Related terms:

Capital Recovery

Capital recovery refers to the earning back of the initial funds put into an investment that a company must accrue before it can earn a profit on its investment. read more

Crowdfunding

Crowdfunding is the use of small amounts of capital from a large number of people to raise money or fund a business. Learn the pros and cons of crowdfunding. read more

Decline

A decline is when a security's price falls in value over the course of a trading day.  read more

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Equity : Formula, Calculation, & Examples

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Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more

Peak

A peak refers to the pinnacle point of economic growth in a business cycle before the market enters into a period of contraction. read more

Private Equity : How Does It Work?

Private equity is a non-publicly traded source of capital from investors who seek to invest or acquire equity ownership in a company. read more

Series B Financing and Example

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Venture Capital

Venture capital is money, technical, or managerial expertise provided by investors to startup firms with long-term growth potential. read more