Promoted from Associate to MD at Independent Sponsor Firm

Jimmy Watson shares his journey from FP&A at Raytheon to Managing Director at Clavis Capital Partners, discussing independent sponsorship and navigating the lower middle-market.

Jimmy Watson

Jimmy Watson graduated during the 2009 financial crisis, which forced him to move back home to his parents' basement. Luckily he soon landed a job in FP&A at Raytheon, and later moved through roles in consulting and middle market banking before eyeing the independent sponsor model. He joined Clavis Capital Partners as an associate in 2018 and rose to Managing Director over the next 8 years.

Minds Capital is an equity fund for independent sponsors. We invest $1-3m of equity per platform and average one commitment per month.

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Jimmy's path into independent sponsorship came through the Dallas finance community: tight-knit, collaborative, and relationship-driven. A former co-worker initiated what became a year-long process to bring him on to Clavis. His FP&A background proved immediately useful: 13-week cash flows, budgets, forecasting tools. This is the kind of sophistication usually missing in the lower middle-market, and therefore a perfect way for Jimmy to add value right out of the gate.

Clavis acquired UCC Environmental in late 2021. UCC was a 100-year-old engineering services business tied heavily to coal-fired power plants. Coal was not particularly sexy in 2021, and coal's % of energy consumption has declined for decades. This obvious risk became the thesis: diversify the revenue base before the energy transition made coal irrelevant. They hired salespeople from adjacent industries to push into heavy industrial and wastewater. Over a 3.5-year hold, EBITDA grew 30% and bookings shifted to 60% wastewater before they exited on a strong offer.

Larger funds and strategics are moving down-market, and valuations reflect it. Jimmy watched a deal go to a buyer 10-12x EBITDA above their own offer (!). Without synergies it's impossible to make the math work for such valuations. To stay disciplined, Clavis's process requires all 3 partners to unanimously agree before anything moves forward. This creates accountability, which is important since a bad deal doesn't becomes a huge opportuntiy cost (time & money).

Clavis targets 3x MOIC with a clear operator angle on every deal. LPs expect high IRR, and the only way to deliver that consistently is to avoid the deals that look fine on paper, but drain the firm for years. The Dallas ecosystem helps: the community shares insights openly, and the pipeline doesn't dry up just because the team gets busy closing.

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