Posts Tagged ‘PEHub’

Twitter: Charles River Ventures’ 40X mistake?

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Charles River Ventures passed on the recent $100 million round of funding in Twitter, after participating in the company’s earlier rounds.

According to VentureBeat, CRV says it sat out as a function of its strategy. It funds early stage startups, and that kind of deal would eat up too much of its $325 million fund. VentureBeat also notes CRV’s investment in Twitter would produce a 40X return based on the microblogging company’s valuation.

That valuation, of course, might mean a lot, and might not mean anything.

PEHub’s Dan Primack notes CRV’s absence from Twitter’s Series C and D rounds, and offers another possible reason the venture firm skipped the latest round: “CRV made a giant mistake and is now trying to justify it.”

For helpful, $1 billion context, you can turn to Twitter itself, to see the VentureBeat headline and link retweeted into oblivion.

NVCA report starts VC/entrepreneur slapfight

Monday, September 21st, 2009

The National Venture Capital Association has released its report on VCs’ impact on the U.S. economy. The report says in 2008, VC-backed companies generated about $3 trillion in revenue and employed about 12 million people in the United States. The report also says VC backed companies have out-performed non-VC-backed companies, and that VCs create whole industries more or less out of thin air.

That all sounds good, but Vivek Wadhwa, a researcher at Harvard, Duke and UC-Berkeley (a hat trick I would have thought to be physically impossible) calls B.S. at TechCrunch, saying the NVCA is trying to justify tax breaks and bailout dough for VCs:

How’d they come up with these numbers? They added up all the revenue generated in 2008 by any company a venture capitalist ever invested a dime in. So if John Doerr bought Bill a lunch in 1985, they’d count Microsoft as part of their empire. Maybe I’m exaggerating a bit. But seriously, the NVCA numbers aren’t even remotely credible.

At PEHub, Dan Primack issued a 14-word, parenthetical reaction:

(grating veneration of entrepreneurs as immaculate purists, forced to suffer the indignity of investment)

On his Startable blog, former Atlas VC Healy Jones splits the difference and calls Wadhwa thoughtful but takes exception with his claim that VCs “go where they smell blood,” rather than funding innovation. Jones says VCs are looking to duck capital gains taxes, but aren’t looking for a bailout. 

FastIgnite CEO Sim Simeonov calls the NVCA’s claims “outlandish,” but strikes a different chord than Wadwha:

My two cents are that if VCs are guilty of claiming or receiving too much credit when things go well, they certainly get too much blame when things go poorly. And I certainly think it’s foolish to only blame VCs for investing too much money in companies. It takes two to tango.

Good week for VC on BBN, Marvel boards

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Silicon Valley-based Jim Breyer, of Accel Partners, sits on the board of both BBN, which Raytheon bought today, and Marvel, which Disney bought yesterday.

Breyer is Accel’s representative at BBN, but invested his own money in Marvel. Raytheon isn’t releasing financial details from the BBN acquisition, but PEHub reports Breyer made out well from the Marvel deal:

As the third largest direct shareholder in Marvel Entertainment, Breyer stands to make nearly $5 million once Disney’s acquisition of the superhero company closes.

Disney said this morning that it plans to pay $4 billion in cash and stock for Marvel. Marvel shareholders — Breyer has 165,700, according to regulatory filings — will get $30 a share plus around 3/4 of a Disney share, a 29 percent premium over Marvel’s closing price on Friday.

Dan Primack’s Waltham theory/business idea

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

PEHub’s Dan Primack has his own theory on the supposed dwindling influence of Waltham:

There are no restaurants/bars/coffee shops within walking distance of the Waltham office parks. And almost none within a five minute drive.
Never understood why some young VCs didn’t open up a nearby watering hole, kind of like the cops in Homicide…
Scott Kirsner called out Watch City yesterday. 

That doesn’t sound good: Venture capital fundraising down 63%

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

PE Hub takes a look at some Dow Jones numbers released this morning — VC funds have raised $5.1 billion in the first half of 2009, or 63 percent less than they raised in the first half of ‘08.

Expect these numbers to be largely mirrored in an upcoming report from the National Venture Capital Association and Thomson Reuters (publisher of peHUB). The overall first-half total will be a bit higher, but the year-over-year change is virtually identical. As of last check in the VentureXpert database, U.S.-based VC funds raised just over $2 billion in Q2 2009. That’s more than a 50% drop from Q1 2009, and a 79% drop from Q2 2008.

The second half of 2009 may be off to a better start locally. Just yesterday MHT reported 5AM Ventures raised $159 million from 34 investors in its third fund, and Excel Venture Management started its first fund to finance both early and late-stage life science firms with the $125 million currently raised for the fund. On Monday, Roger Krakoff was reported to have left Sigma Partners to start a new fund.

What venture capitalists do on summer vacation: Jeff Bussgang’s in the office

Friday, June 26th, 2009
Jeff Bussgang

Jeff Bussgang

Flybridge Capital Partners partner Jeff Bussgang writes a piece for PEHub saying venture capitalists don’t get the summer off, despite the complaints of entrepreneurs who say they can’t find them when it starts to get warm out, or rain all day every day — whatever it is that summer does.

Either way, Bussgang busts out the numbers to back up his argument:

We have closed 42 new deals since we started the firm 7+ years ago. Guess which month was our largest in terms of number and capital? August, with 9 new deals closed! December was second and July was third. So much for taking the summer off. Looking at the follow-on investments and new deals in aggregate (nearly 120 transactions), our data shows that December was the most active month and August second. So much for that theory.

I’d be curious to hear what other VCs and entrepreneurs experience on this dimension, but I have to say that the data suggests the urban legend is false. VCs simply do not take the summer off and aspiring entrepreneurs can get plenty of deals done, all else being equal.

So if you’re an entrepreneur and you can’t find your VC, he’s not on vacation — he probably just hates you.

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