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Archive for the ‘Venture Capital Dispatch’ Category

Venture Financing Forecast for 2013: Partly Cloudy With Lower Chance of Success

By Russ Garland

Concerns that Series A rounds will be hard to come by in 2013 are widespread in the venture business, according to a survey being released today.

Forty-five percent of venture capitalists think this will be the most difficult financing to obtain, according to a survey of venture capitalists and startup chief executives by Dow Jones VentureSource and the National Venture Capital Association. That reflects an ongoing debate in the industry about whether seed-stage investors have financed too many consumer Internet startups that will now have trouble tapping the venture capital they need to grow.

Only 13% of the VC respondents said seed/angel financing would be the hardest to get in 2013 while 28% thought it would be Series B financing. The survey, conducted from Nov. 26 to Dec. 7, collected responses from more than 600 venture investors and CEOs of venture-backed startups. Responses were equally divided between the two groups.

A plurality of CEOs-42%–thought it would be more difficult to raise follow-on financing in 2013 versus this year; 36% said it would be the same difficulty and 22% said it would be less difficult.

Nonetheless, 67% of the CEOs said their company will raise additional capital in 2013. And 78% of them thought their company’s valuation would increase. But VCs were less sanguine–38% said valuations in their portfolio would decrease in 2013 compared with 2012.

VCs and CEOs were also of different minds when it came to forecasting the amount of U.S. venture investment next year. Venture capitalists were pessimistic, with 47% saying it would decrease, while 30% of CEOs said it would decrease.

VC attitudes are probably shaped by the frosty fundraising landscape. Of the respondents, 44% said venture capital fundraising would contract in 2013 with less money raised by fewer funds. Another 42% said it would concentrate with more money raised by fewer funds.

“Overall quality of companies is increasing; VC will continue to contract but overall achieve better quality,” said one of the respondents, Derek Small, CEO and president of drug developer Naurex, which this week announced it had raised $38 million in Series B financing.

VCs were upbeat about fund performance, with half of them expecting venture capital returns to improve in 2013. Most VCs predicted that the IPO market would be at least as good as this year, with 40% saying there would be more IPOs than in 2012 and 52% saying the quality would be higher.

Sandy Miller of Institutional Venture Partners said, “2013 should see a sustained good IPO environment rather than the starts and stops of recent years. All the ingredients are in place.”

Such optimism about the IPO market was another point of disagreement between VCs and CEOs, however, as just 29% of CEOs expect the number of IPOs to increase and 37% say the quality will be higher. The two groups agreed, however, that there would be more acquisitions next year of venture-backed companies, with 62% of each group predicting an increase.

Venture investors expect a pickup in business IT and health-care IT investing in 2013, with 61% and 57% seeing increases in those sectors, respectively. Interest in consumer IT has ebbed, with 35% of VCs forecasting an investment increase and 40% foreseeing a decline.

“The B2B tech private company valuation bubble will grow and then pop in October,” predicted Scott Maxwell of OpenView Venture Partners.

VentureSource is a research unit of VentureWire publisher Dow Jones & Co.

Write to Russ Garland at russell.garland@dowjones.com. Follow him on Twitter at @RussGarland

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Q&A With Lending Tree Founder Doug Lebda: Helping Kids Manage Real Money

By Lora Kolodny

Entrepreneur Doug Lebda already changed the financial services game in the United States with his first company, Lending Tree. In the late ’90s, it began to simplify the way that consumers research and get loans online.

Today, Lebda still wants to help people master financial responsibility, but he’s doing it at a more fundamental level. As the co-founder and chairman of Tykoon, he’s helping kids earn, save, donate and spend their money responsibly online, in a way that feels more like a game than a chore.

Tykoon
Lending Tree Founder Doug Lebda, who has now founded Tykoon.

Late last year, Tykoon raised $1.4 million in a Series A round of venture funding. Investors included Lebda himself, outside funds and angels, RRE Ventures, Rick Thompson, Chamath Palihapitiya, David Bach and G. Kennedy Thompson.

The entrepreneur spoke with VentureWire recently about the inspiration behind the new company, what he’s doing differently the second time around, and financial trends that are changing the start-up game today.

An edited version of that conversation follows.

What is Tykoon, in a nutshell?

Tykoon is a financial-services platform for kids and families. It gives parents a way to pass on their financial values to their kids, seamlessly. The app lets kids earn, save and give money to charities, and spend what they earn on things that are parent-approved.

How did you and Mark Bruinooge, your co-founder and the CEO of Tykoon, come up with this app?

All of my ideas come from my own experiences and problems. I noticed that everyone’s kids were spending a lot of time doing tasks, if you will, online. They were playing games to earn fake currency used to buy fake things so that they could show it off to their friends.

Why not complete real tasks to earn real money and buy real things? I wanted to encourage them to help out around the house and save for things on their own, learn some personal and financial responsibility in a positive way.

There’s a banking side, here too. I believe very strongly that banks and financial-services companies today are struggling to improve their brands, and do something of real value for their customers.

It is incumbent upon them to make sure their customers are smart about money. Offering a kind of white-label version of Tykoon to their customers is one way that a bank can do that.

Where are you in terms of progress with users and on your mission with Tykoon? 

We launched our app this spring, and have amassed over 20,000 users. We’re very, very pleased with that. We’re growing roughly by 1,000 users per week. We think that will accelerate when we add family-gifting features, and other social networking features.

Kids are really loving the platform so far, and actually changing their behavior, too. Do not underestimate how hard it is to change behavior.

In my own experience, my kids will now ask me to do more things around the house so that they can earn money…

Tykoon also provides nonmonetary rewards. [My co-founder’s] kids will do more chores so they can “buy” more computer time, for example. It’s all up to the family, and how they want to set it up.

Are you doing things differently this time around? How so?

When I started Lending Tree, I did not have all the supportive capital I needed. Our business model required substantial change in an industry that had not changed in years, mortgages and banking. Because of that, it required significant amounts of capital before we could reach profitability. We raised $100 million before we made money.

This time around, we have the luxury of being very selective about who we raise money from and under what terms. We’re also building a business that people naturally want to tell other people about, so we won’t rely on paid marketing. And Tykoon offers a high-engagement product.

A mortgage is only done every three to five years. We see people visit Tykoon at least weekly. Because the product is built to be social and viral, and has that engagement, we can grow it faster.

What macroeconomic trends are hurting or helping start-ups now?

I don’t think things like mortgages or credit are impacting financings for tech startups. There are a lot of venture firms out there, and their funds are very large. So entrepreneurs have raised a significant amount of venture capital in deals recently.

The economy is not great but it certainly wasn’t great three years ago when lots of deals were getting done. It’s improving now, I believe.

What’s shaping the start-up scene, instead then?

There seems to be a decreased appetite to fund… and a higher bar to fund start-ups. Venture funds are dealing with a slowdown in IPOs, and reduced expectations among portfolio companies.

Facebook, Groupon and Zynga were considered to be companies that could not fail, financially, from a returns perspective. That’s cascading down the food chain, now.

There are also a very large number of seed deals, going back a year and two years ago. This means there’s a higher hurdle for a company to get venture funding, later. Start-ups have to demonstrate more traction than they once had to…

Venture capital is hot or cold, but seldom warm. Right now it feels like we’re in a cooling trend.

Write to lora.kolodny@dowjones.com. Follow her on Twitter @lorakolodny

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The Daily Start-Up: Latest Solar Casualty GreenVolts Hires Comerica to Help Sell Assets

Top stories in today’s VentureWire:

dailystartup_D_20090806101628.jpgArt by Mike Lucas

Comerica Bank has been hired to find buyers for the assets of concentrating photovoltaics company GreenVolts, the latest heavily venture-financed solar company to go up for a fire sale, a person familiar with the situation told VentureWire. Investors, who had contributed about $120 million of equity to the company, pulled the plug last month, deciding to not continue their support because of increasingly difficult market conditions, leading GreenVolts to lay off all of its 80-some employees. “We’ve created a lot of value and are trying to see if we can find a good home for the assets,” said Eric Romo, the company’s co-founder.

The venture capital fundraising picture in the U.S. didn’t change in the third quarter as most money continued to flow to a handful of funds. Thirty-seven funds held closings, down from 46 in last year’s third period, but they raised $4.73 billion versus $2.45 billion a year ago, the latest data from Dow Jones LP Source show. Fundraising for the first nine months of the year is running well ahead of last–$17.51 billion versus $12.68 billion–but only a few more funds have had closings–120 compared with 110 a year earlier. (LP Source is a service of VentureWire publisher Dow Jones & Co.)

Also in today’s VentureWire, Solar installation and leasing company SolarCity filed for an initial public offering of up to $201.3 million as it looks to build funds for broad corporate uses, in a bid to bring some good news to a clean-technology sector that has struggled to produce good returns…Pearl.com has raised $26 million in Series B funding led by Crosslink Capital, less than four months after emerging from stealth with a $25 million Series A round. It also hired a chief financial officer, Erik Zech, with public company experience. Pearl.com’s website connects people who have questions to professionals who can answer them…and LigoCyte Pharmaceuticals has agreed to merge with Takeda Pharmaceutical 4502.TO -1.26% in a deal expected to deliver good returns to venture investors, after LigoCyte developed what may become the first vaccine to protect against a type of virus that causes stomach flu.

(VentureWire is a daily newsletter with comprehensive analysis of all the investments, deals and personnel moves involving start-ups and their venture backers. For a two-week trial, visit our homepage, scroll to the bottom and click “try for free.”)

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  • October 2, 2012, 5:29 PM

New York’s Cleanweb Hackathon Sparks Green Ideas Where Clean-Tech and IT Intersect

By Yuliya Chernova

Republicans driving electric cars? That’s one thing you might discover through your social networks, according to Bill Weihl, recently hired by Facebook to lead the company’s sustainability efforts.

Getty Images

Weihl was speaking on Friday night at the New York CleanWeb Hackathon, for which he flew in from Silicon Valley. It was the second such event held in New York, and one of several around the country, that’s meant to connect developers and people with business ideas to form teams and create applications that use the Web in pursuit of environmental sustainability.

On Friday night mingling in the recently opened collaborative space for start-ups AlleyNYC were people from different walks of life, each with an interest in the area or an idea. There was a psychiatrist who wanted to create crowd-funded solar projects, and someone who works in an IT department of a consumer magazine who’s interested in developing apps that would help increase the fuel economy of cars. Over the weekend, some 200 people participated in the hackathon.

By Sunday, judges picked three winners: Green Building Banner, a Google Chrome plug-in that brings energy data to consumers; Lean Green Stormwater, an online tool, which allows facility owners to calculate stormwater charges and savings under various stormwater mitigation investments; and Parkifi, a mobile app that helps users find a New York park with a Wi-Fi hotspot.

This sub-sector, alternatively called cleanweb, clean IT, energy IT, and digital cleantech, depending on who you ask, is attracting more venture investing. The web “has the potential to change our relationship with resources,” said Nicholas Eisenberger, managing partner at venture accelerator Pure Energy Partners.

Eisenberger said that he is working on a report with Cleantech Group that will show that investments in cleanweb, businesses at the intersection of IT and energy, have been growing as a percentage of all clean-tech dollars spent by venture capitalists.

Examples of such companies are Sungevity, a solar financing company that evaluates rooftop solar potential by using satellite data and allowing consumers to get accurate quotes for their projects online. With a bit of a stretch, even Airbnb, a property-rental-by-owner service online, could be considered cleanweb, said Eisenberger, because renting available empty space is more energy efficient and sustainable than building new hotels to accommodate visitors, and apartments are more energy-efficient than hotels, he said.

For Facebook FB -1.04%, the cleanweb is already a reality via a recent collaboration with OPower, a venture-backed company. OPower’s Facebook plug-in allows users to compare energy use and compete against friends and family on energy-saving practices.

“I think a lot of people would probably be surprised by how many people in their social network, actually do things that they [may have considered] fringe,” said Weihl.

Write to Yuliya Chernova at yuliya.chernova@dowjones.com. Follow her on Twitter @ychernova

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By Russ Garland

Pickings are slim for most firms on the fundraising trail, but the path is crowded.

Dow Jones VentureSource took a look at data compiled for the October issue of Private Equity Analyst, a sister publication to VentureWire, and found 330 open U.S. venture funds looking to raise about $26 billion.

Bloomberg News

It’s safe to say that some of those funds are not being actively marketed as the dismal fundraising climate has caused firms to back off, hoping that better days will come. Plenty were looking for Facebook’s IPO to signal a new dawn–but we all know how that turned out.

Limited partners still appear skeptical of venture returns and willing to commit only to well-established firms who seem to be consistent performers. Those firms can pretty much raise what they want. The $2.6 billion fund recently closed by New Enterprise Associates is Exhibit A.

But NEA found lots of interest in venture as an asset class, perhaps a sign that the pendulum is swinging back. Despite the Facebook debacle, a healthy lineup of venture-backed companies is waiting to go public and VCs remain optimistic about investment opportunities. Also, pension funds, a traditional source of venture capital, are under pressure to generate better results.

As of July, U.S. venture fundraising stood at $13 billion, up 31% from the first six months of last year, but four funds raised just over $6 billion of that. Notable, however, was that 82 funds had held closings, up from 73 a year earlier.

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