What if this is the best thing that could have happened for venture capitalists and their companies?
By “this” we mean the complete and utter destruction of Wall Street, and by “best thing” we’re obviously thinking long, long-term impact here. Clearly, things will be rough for a long time coming.
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But venture capitalists have been squealing about how Sarbanes-Oxley has regulated them right out of the IPO business, saying the costs and oversight were too much for their little start-up companies to bear.
Then, the bulge bracket banks—the big guys with the bankers, analysts and cash—began turning their eyes to bigger, exciting and, yes, revenue-generating deals, leaving their little biopharma and device companies that could under-covered and forgotten in the eyes of many VCs.
Well, those days are clearly done. The question now remains, what will rise from the ashes? Will the banking and analyst staff that once populated the highest offices in Manhattan find their way to some of the boutique banks that have made themselves a nice little business putting together smaller deals, bringing the experience and resources to grow those institutions?
Furthermore, as one institutional investor tells us, venture capitalists could help themselves and this nascent boutique banking industry by steering some of the choice work toward smaller investment banks, eschewing the cache and hoopla associated with one of Wall Street’s blue chip names.
Uh, former blue chip names.
PE Hub had a similar conversation about small tech companies with Paul Deninger, vice chairman of the investment bank Jefferies & Co. We're not buying all that he's selling, but read it here, including the blistering comments. (BTW, we'd hardly consider IPC The Hospitalist Company, a tech company. It's a health care company thanks very much.)
So, is this the end of the world as we know it? Or has the past few weeks been a necessary—and admittedly painful—cutting of the larger trees that will allow some sunshine and rain wash over the growth underneath?
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As we said the short-term is pretty bleak. Witness this week's announcement that the spin-out of Angiotech Pharmaceutical is in danger, which likely means no investment by Ares Capital or New Leaf investment.
Also, VentureWire Lifescience and others reported on the recent fund-raising by Kalobios, which didn't include previous investor Lehman Brothers.
"We were all set to close on Friday of last week, until Lehman filed for bankruptcy," said KaloBios Chief Executive David Pritchard. "They had several million committed to the round, and while we only lost one business day...we had to rush to make that up."
Lehman had led KaloBios' $20 million Series C round in July 2007 through its health-care venture capital group. That group invests directly off the firm's balance sheet, unlike Lehman's IT-oriented venture partners group, which closed a $365 million fifth fund in September 2007. Randy Whitestone, a Lehman spokesman, said the venture partners group is part of the firm currently being auctioned off, and he said the firm is not certain of the health-care group's fate.
Pritchard described embattled Lehman as "a great investor and very supportive of the company." Jeffrey Farrell, a senior vice president at the investment firm, was an observer on KaloBios' board.
Pritchard said many of the round's other investors stepped in over the weekend to fill the hole left by Lehman, contributing above-pro rata shares. New investors Genzyme Ventures and Mitsubishi UFJ Capital led the round, joined by existing investors Alloy Ventures, 5AM Ventures, GBS Ventures, Lotus Bioscience Ventures, MPM Capital, Singapore Bioinnovations and Sofinnova Ventures.
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Fred Wilson, general partner at Union Square Ventures, has an interesting little post on his A VC blog about how the New York Times came to profile his firm. The serendipitous origin of the article must broil PR pros who would kill to get their clients such a profile, but more often than not this is how such profiles come together.
Anyway, the article relays how Union Square Ventures is willing to take small stakes in tiny start-ups, exclusively in tech. That's easier to do with a $165 million fund, but it got us thinking. We wrote extensively about how larger venture capital firms are maintaining their early-stage medical device flow by committing small bits of capital in ventures started by proven entrepreneurs who are affiliated with the fund. But are there any life sciences VCs who exclusively make similarly sized bets in untested start ups?
2 comments:
I think it would be difficult for this model to work inbiotech/medtech funds. In the biotech world, it is a given that the capital requirements will be enormous if the company is successful (with some rare exceptions, e.g., GlycoFi). Adequate reserves need to be in place for each investment, making placing many small bets difficult.
Furthermore, quality deal flow is generally not a problem for biotech funds, so this "small bet" concept to capture better deal flow might be a good idea in the IT space, but is not as critical in the biotech space.
I actually like this model. I left big biotech a year ago and have been working in the start-up area. I see a lot of technology that may have merit, but needs more exploration of worthiness in a manner that is outside the realm of academia. A few hundred K would allow clarification of the opportunity. Without that money, these technologies are not developing. I know several VCs who recognize this problem and have talked about moving into this space, but now is a tough time to take such a long risk when you can reformulate an existing generic! Currently, SBIR grants are the option for closing this funding gap, but I hope VCs come into this space as well.
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