Minds Capital: Lessons from Fund 1 & Strategy for Flagship 2

Minds Capital founders share investment lessons from Fund 1, their bullish outlook on US private equity, and strategy for upcoming Flagship 2 fund with larger commitments.

Will Smith, Max Lummis, Niklas James

After 15 months, Minds Capital Fund 1 has invested in 13 deals, committed to 3 more, and have several investment opportunities currently in "Partner Review." More than 90% of the capital has been deployed in deals from independent sponsors (vs. searchers). A few early deals were lost at the commitment stage because decisions took too long, pushing us to improve our processes & operations. Building repeat relationships with sponsors is a core focus, creating a flywheel effect.

Once equipped with an Investment Memo, a QoE report, and a pro forma model, Minds Capital uses a checklist with 80-90 items to vet each investment opportunity across four sections (market, target company, sponsor, and deal terms). This uncovers red & yellow flags, and also highlights a deal's strongpoints. The best base cases are those that constitute a continuation of the company's history and the sponsor's track record, as opposed to a thesis that includes too many variables. Finally, the partners at Minds Capital ask: "Is this the best deal in our pipeline right now," force-ranking the opportunities to avoid the "good enough" fallacy.

The team sees multiple macro tailwinds for US private equity. Recent tax changes accelerate depreciation, spurring CAPEX investment, while AI and data center growth add structural demand. Tariffs, for all their controversy, will in the near-term repatriate investment and enhance competitiveness of US-based companies. Productivity gains from AI, especially pushed by US companies, further strengthen the outlook. So, Minds Capital is long on US (private) equity, backed by historical evidence from established lower middle market investors achieving more than 3x MOIC.

With Fund 1 expected to be fully deployed by late fall, Minds' robust deal flow will continue uninterrupted into Flagship 2. The new fund will target the same types of opportunities, but with larger commitments of $1 to $3 million per platform. While Minds remains committed to its strong base of retail investors, SEC regulations cap participation at 99 investors per vehicle, prompting a minimum investment of $200,000 for Flagship 2.

More recent episodes

Robert Koven
EP.
14
with
Robert Koven

The State of SaaS in 2025

Bob Koven shares insights on SaaS maturity in 2025, the shift to profitability over growth, AI as a strategic differentiator, and how the independent sponsor model has evolved to require infrastructure.

Sequoya Borgman
EP.
13
with
Sequoya Borgman

Borgman: 500 LPs Across 10 Platforms

Sequoya Borgman of Borgman Capital shares how retail fundraising, second-tier cities, and disciplined execution drove 10 platforms and 500+ LPs since 2017.

Neel Bhargava
EP.
12
with
Neel Bhargava

From Minority Stake to Double EBITDA in 2 Years

Neel Bhargava shares how a minority stake in a Crunch franchise grew from 10 to 74 gyms, driven by thematic focus, recapitalizations, and strong management.

new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week

Be the first to know about new episodes!

Receive summaries of our weekly interview drops:
Thank you! You've subscribed to our podcast list.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Want to recommend a guest for the Minds Capital Podcast?
Send an email to podcast@mindscapital.co.