Archive for the ‘Personnel’ Category

Stonebraker’s startups: Trading in the blink of an eye

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
Michael Stonebraker, MHT All-Star in 2008, is at it again with another startup

Michael Stonebraker, MHT All-Star in 2008, is at it again with another startup

Of the five startups Michael Stonebraker has helped to launch in recent years, three of them — including a new company brought out of stealth mode this week — are involved in an arcane segment of securities trading that has become the focus of keen interest, both by investors eager for reliable returns, and regulators concerned about market impacts.

High-frequency trading — also known as algorithmic, or black-box trading — lets investors beat the market by a hair. Proprietary algorithms crunch market data to predict small, short-term moves in stock price, then execute trades automatically, within milliseconds — before the rest of the market has time to react.

Stonebraker’s new startup, VoltDB, helps high-frequency traders assess and hedge risk during blink-of-an-eye transactions. He compared high-frequency trading’s gains to a nickel unearthed from a field by a fleet of bulldozers: High-frequency trade operations vie to be the fastest to run into the field and grab the nickel, he said.

Sounds dangerous — but the strategy proved a moneymaker in 2008, garnering new attention from investors. The New York Stock Exchange is now building a large New Jersey facility dedicated to the practice. High-frequency trading is the exchange’s future, an NYSE official told the Wall Street Journal last month.

With success has come public criticism and regulatory scrutiny. Both the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and its London counterpart, the U.K. Financial Services Authority, are now investigating how the practice might systemically affect equity markets. On Monday, Nobel prize winner and columnist for the New York Times Paul Krugman wrote that high-frequency trading levies a de facto tax on the average trader, by giving an unfair advantage to those who can afford cutting-edge technology.

Software made by two of Stonebraker’s prior companies, Vertica Systems Inc. and Streambase Systems Inc., is part of that advantage. The new company, VoltDB, is out of stealth mode with another tool high-frequency traders can use to gain an edge. High-frequency trading desks use Streambase to run algorithms and execute trades in real time. Vertica is used to test traders’ theories, back-testing algorithms against historical market data. VoltDB, still in alpha testing mode, may be used by firms to hedge exposure during the millisecond when 100 trading desks all take the same position on a security.

“Instead of getting market tics, you’re simply getting a list of trades that every desk in your company makes — and you just want to assemble the complete position of the entire company and then ask questions about it,” Stonebraker said.

Stonebraker, a 2008 Mass High Tech All-Star who is known as the “father of the relational database,” for his role on the Postgres project at the University of California Berkeley in the 1980s, explained VoltDB’s innovation. It is startlingly simple. The product is an online transaction-processing system that, unlike legacy systems, pays no attention to concurrency control, resource contention locking, recovery logs, queues or disk management. “We just get rid of all that stuff,” Stonebraker said. “That allows us to go wildly faster.”

[For the rest of Stonebraker's comments to Galen, check out "Net Gains" in this Friday's print edition.]

VivaKi’s Kenny says digital advertisers are happy with Microsoft-Yahoo deal

Friday, July 31st, 2009
Kenny, seen here in Boston as chairman/CEO of Digitas, in 2007

Kenny, seen here in Boston as chairman/CEO of Digitas, in 2007

Local digital advertising executive David Kenny — the managing partner of VivaKi, which is the digital unit of Publicis Groupe (known better locally as Digitas) — is making the media rounds in the wake of the Microsoft-Yahoo search advertising deal announced earlier this week.

Kenny weighed in on the Microsoft-Yahoo deal in a New York Times blog and, according to a piece in the Wall Street Journal yesterday, Kenny was also among a number of digital ad executives whom Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz met with back in June. The WSJ said they discussed how a possible Microsoft-Yahoo deal could add value to VivaKi’s clients. “I didn’t feel they were lobbying, but felt they were generally asking my opinion,” Kenny told the Journal.

In AdAge, Kenny was quoted as saying that the deal is “a net positive for marketers.”

“Anything that creates a credible platform and more innovation in search is going to be good for consumers and, therefore, good for advertisers,” he told AdAge.

NewsFlash Roundup: Joule Biotechnologies, North End Technologies, Verizon Communications

Monday, July 27th, 2009
New England Tech Stock Index

New England Tech Stock Index

Joule comes out of stealth, North End stays in stealth but gets some money, and Verizon cuts jobs in today’s NewsFlash Roundup.

Joule Biotechnologies comes out of stealth with solar-powered biofuel tech

The two-year-old clean tech firm founded and backed by Flagship Ventures managing partner Noubar Afeyan emerged from stealth mode Monday, announcing it is working on a large-scale test of its Helioculture technology, which uses the genetically engineered cells to produce fuels with the sun, wastewater and carbon dioxide.

Stealthy North End Technologies gets $1.2M in bridge funding

Landing a Series B “will allow us to bring a product to market,” Kayton said. What that product is has been a subject of much speculation, and Kayton would not reveal any details other than to say “we are in an alpha stage.”

Verizon to cut 8,000 positions; N.E. numbers unknown

Verizon Communications Inc. said it would 8,000 more positions by the end of the year as the company continues to be stung by a slowdown in corporate accounts. (more…)

NewsFlash Roundup: Boston Scientific, Epix, Draper Lab

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009
New England Tech Stock Index

New England Tech Stock Index

Boston Scientific’s way up, VC deals are way down, and Epix is down and out in today’s NewsFlash roundup. Also, News editor Rodney Brown drops by Draper Lab’s Apollo 11 anniversary party. 

• Boston Scientific profits up 60%

The Natick-based manufacturer of medical devices had revenue of $2.07 billion in the second quarter of this year, up slightly from $2.02 billion in the second quarter of 2008. Net income increased to $158 million from $98 million a year earlier.

• Epix to liquidate assets

The Lexington-based company’s officials said that the company was unable to raise enough money or enter into a partnership in time and that it has entered into an Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors. The purpose of the Assignment is to conclude the company’s operations and provide for an orderly liquidation of its assets.

New NVCA data reveals fewer Q2 VC deals, slower recovery

Numbers reported this morning by the NVCA and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP were considerably less optimistic, showing $3.7 million invested over 612 deals. While Dow Jones analysts predicted a “rebound” in the venture investing sector, the NVCA says figures for the full year will most likely reflect a setback to 1996 and 1997 levels of $11 billion to $14 billion. (more…)

Clean Energy Fellows update, fancy edition

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Last week I checked in with the 2008 Clean Energy Council fellows to see what they’re up to now.

Projo: Vectrix lays off 20, may file for bankruptcy

Thursday, July 16th, 2009


View Job Cuts in 2009 in a larger map

The Providence Journal reports that Middletown, R.I.-based electric scooter company Vectrix has laid off 20 workers — almost its whole staff — and may file for bankruptcy.

The last time MHT checked in with the company, it was planning to use fuel cells to power the scooters.

NewsFlash Roundup: Best biotech cities listed, drug patent protection changes

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

In today’s NewsFlash roundup, Lowell stands alone for biotech, a Senate committee approves longer drug patent protection and Oxigene raises $10 million. 

MBC, MassEcon rates cities, towns for biotech; Lowell ranks highest

Among the ratings, Lowell achieved the sole platinum level; Chelmsford, Marlborough and Somerville received silver ratings; and Newton, Hatfield and Norfolk received bronze ratings. In total, MBC and MassEcon have rated 51 communities since the BioReady Communities Campaign was launched in Massachusetts in 2008.

Senate committee pushes 12-year bio patent limit

This week, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions voted to approve a 12-year data exclusivity clause, giving biotechnology companies 12 years of drug patent protection and preventing generic drug makers for 12 years from copying the drugs and selling cheaper versions. Despite President Obama’s backing of a seven-year exclusivity limit, the HELP committee, led by U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., passed the measure 16 to 7.

Oxigene to raise $10M in stock offering

The offering consists of one share of common stock, at a price of $1.60 per unit, as well as a warrant to buy 0.45 shares of common stock at $2.10 per share and a warrant that starts on the issue date and ends in the latest of a few timeline options noted by the company. (more…)

Finance Roundup: Gabrieli, EMC, Modiv Media, AS&E

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

In today’s Finance Roundup, Chris Gabrieli speaks out on investing and public policy, Data Domain caves in to EMC’s $2.1 billion offer, Modiv Media lands some funding for its wireless shopping devices, and AS&E continues on its path to X-ray screening success.

Venture capitalist Gabrieli made a run for governor in 2006. Though it was assumed he would not  run in 2010, Gabrieli had not necessarily said so. MHT reporter Galen Moore put him on the spot — and yes, he denied any plans to run. So there you have it, from the investor and (former?) politician’s mouth. The interview went on to discuss Gabrieli’s thoughts on the crossroads of government and innovation, the state’s competitiveness, and effectiveness of public education.

Persistence pays off for EMC’s stubborn pursuit of Data Domain, the company playing the disinterested lover for the last month while it let EMC and NetApp duke out a bidding war for its affection. If anything, DD wanted no part of EMC’s takeover, going so far as to recommend that shareholders reject the bid. In the end, loyalty to NetApp’s contract lost out and the big money of EMC’s $2.1 billion offer finally won over DD. Who says money can’t buy love?

Have you seen those devices in Stop & Shop grocery stores that allow you to play cashier and ring your products up wirelessly as you shop? Well, expect to see more of those. Modiv Media has pulled in $1.2 million of an expected $2.5 million financing round.

And in the defense/security world, AS&E continues to succeed in its niche of X-ray screening vans, especially popular with border control. The company just landed an $8.6 million follow-on order for Z Backscatter X-ray screening systems.

Monster mum on layoff report

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

We’re trying to confirm reports of a large round of layoffs at Monster Worldwide Inc. (NYSE: MWW). The company, with headquarters in New York and offices in Maynard, may have laid off as many as 200, according to the recruiting blog Cheezhead, which quoted an anonymous source reportedly among those laid off.

So far, mention of layoffs at the Internet job search company has surfaced on Twitter, as well. But the company is skirting questions on the topic, saying only that it is restructuring its product and technology division.

“We continue to re-structure, re-organize and, importantly, re-invest in our  organization in ways that we  believe are necessary to meet our ever-growing and changing customer needs,” reads a written statement emailed by a spokeswoman. “This means that  roles and skill areas that are no longer needed to  support the  business are re-structured.”

The same statement also mentioned a “Technology Center of Excellence and Innovation,” which the company is opening in Cambridge. The move was announced internally “over the past several days,” along with the product and technology restructuring, according to the statement.

However, a spokeswoman declined to say more about that project – or facility, or whatever it is – until after the company reports earnings, later this month.

Last week, Monster’s stock tumbled after the release of worse-than-expected June job loss numbers.

NewsFlash Roundup: Northeastern, Sepracor, IMS Health

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

In today’s NewsFlash roundup, Northeastern launches a new Master’s, a Sepracor drug trial comes up disappointingly inconclusive, and IMS  Health gets a chief privacy officer. 

NH signs with ConEd for wind power

The energy contract runs through May 31, 2010, and moves the Granite State closer to its goal to have 25 percent of its power from renewable sources. ConEdison, based in White Plains, N.Y., said in a statement the wind power comes from developments across the U.S. The energy supplier purchases renewable energy credits that equate to the amount of electricity supplied to the state.

Northeastern to launch clean energy-focused master’s degree

The program is intended to give engineers or technical business majors cross-disciplinary education in technologies that are sustainable and marketable. The program  will comprise engineering and capital projects financing and will teach students how to integrate traditional energy systems with alternative systems using solar, wind, hydropower and photovoltaic technologies. 

Conn. reopens solar rebate program with new funds

The Connecticut Clean Energy Fund is once again accepting applications to its solar rebate program thanks to $3.1 million in fresh funding.

The rebate program, which provides rebates of up to 40 percent for installation of small solar photovoltaic systems, had been closed since November because all previous funding had been allocated. The new funding comes from a mix of federal stimulus funds and electricity ratepayer charges. (more…)

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