Abstract

Cross-border venture capital investment has grown dramatically. Drawing upon observations about the liability of foreignness, previous research has shown that foreign venture capitalists (VCs) tend to partner with local VCs in order to offset information asymmetry and the liabilities of foreignness. Much of the literature has suggested that local VCs should help reduce operational uncertainty. This paper examines syndication partner choice in China, which today is likely the most uncertain environment in which foreign VCs operate on a large scale. This provides an ideal environment for understanding partner selection under uncertainty. Our results show that foreign investors are more likely to choose Chinese investors in later rounds and in more mature portfolio firms. While foreign firms with more Chinese experience are more likely to co-invest with Chinese VCs, the older foreign VC firms are less likely to do so. Remarkably, having a Chinese office made foreign VCs less likely to co-invest. In seed-stage investments, when uncertainty is the greatest, foreign firms are least likely to co-invest with Chinese VCs, and this was not affected by the maturation of the market, while at the later stage, when uncertainty is lowest, they are most likely to co-invest.

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