YouTube video summary

Stanford Seminar - Silicon Valley & The U.S. Government: DoD’s Office of Strategic Capital

Finance02 Apr 20242 min summaryFrom Stanford Online
Stanford Seminar - Silicon Valley & The U.S. Government: DoD’s Office of Strategic Capital
Stanford Online
YouTube

Office of Strategic Capital (OSC)

  • OSC was established to attract and scale private capital in support of national security.
  • The US government funds basic research and prototyping, but private capital is the dominant source of financing for commercialization and scale-up.
  • Critical technology areas, such as semiconductors, renewable energy, and quantum computing, are not receiving sufficient private financing.
  • Software industries and software-enabled industries receive more investment because they can return capital faster and have lower technical risk.
  • There has been a decline in early-stage commercial investment in hardware-based industries due to their higher cost, longer time to generate returns, and less well-understood nature.
  • OSC focuses on components, not capabilities, and uses lending, not spending, to support primarily commercial, non-federal industries.
  • OSC collaborates with other government organizations like DARPA and DIU to identify promising technologies and support their transition to the defense sector.
  • OSC's priority list for critical technologies is based on capital flows, capital intensity, and time to exit, rather than solely on national security considerations.
  • OSC believes that providing loan programs is more effective than simply becoming a better buyer of technology, as it addresses supply chain issues and ensures secure access to critical components.
  • OSC recognizes the importance of working with international allies and investors to leverage their expertise and resources in supporting critical technologies.
  • OSC's focus is not limited to venture capital providers but encompasses the full capital stack.

Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) Program

  • The SBIC program, created in 1958, provides government-backed loans to equity investors to make investments in areas of national security concern.
  • The SBIC program helped to accelerate the growth of venture capital and funded companies like Intel and Sun Microsystems.
  • The SBIC program provides government-backed loans to investors, which are then matched with private capital to invest in critical technology companies.
  • The SBIC program has been around since 1958 and has not cost taxpayers any money in the last few decades.
  • The Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) launched the SBIC's Critical Technologies Initiative to focus on investing in critical technology areas within the industrial base.
  • The SBIC program is a scalable way to attract and scale private capital without costing taxpayers any money.
  • Applications for the SBIC's Critical Technologies Initiative are open now.

Advice for Founders, Students, and Investors

  • Continue pushing forward and advancing industries and research in a way that builds new industries and growth for the country.
  • Consider government service in the technology, innovation, and national security space, as it is pervasive across the US government and offers diverse opportunities.
  • Stanford graduates are encouraged to follow OSD for potential job opportunities in the future.
Made with Recall · in 3 seconds

Get a summary like this for anything you read, watch or save.

Recall summarizes any link you paste, then keeps it in your personal library so you can search, chat with it, and never lose a key idea again.

YouTube videosArticlesPodcastsPDFsAnything else
Save this summary

Then save anything you watch or read next.

Bookmark this summary, then save any video, article or PDF you read next.

Save to your library
Browse all from Stanford Online →

Ready to get started?

Save, summarize & chat with your content.

GET STARTED

IT'S FREE

No credit card required · 30 Day Refund on Premium · 24 Hour Support

Recall web app on laptop