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Matrix Edges Kleiner
by Paul Shread
January 29, 2001–Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Matrix
Partners are considered the cream of the crop among venture capital
firms, the kind of VCs that limited partners are fortunate to be able to
invest their money with.
So compliments paid, we set out to find out which was better.
Using the data of Steve Lisson, editor of InsiderVC.com, who tracks
VCs’ performance and considers Matrix and Kleiner the top VCs, we
applied a metric suggested by former Flatiron partner Dan Malven, which
we will call the “Malven Metric.”
Malven suggested the metric after our piece comparing Kleiner’s
performance in the IPO market last year with four other firms. In short,
we divide overall performance by the number of partners, thus measuring
wealth created per partner.
Malven cautions that that measure of performance could be skewed if
each partner at one firm has a lot more to invest than partners at
another firm, but Kleiner and Matrix appear pretty evenly matched.
Matrix IV in 1995 was a $125 million fund (and had distributed 11 times
that amount to its limited partners by the middle of last year,
according to Lisson), and Matrix V in 1998 was a $200 million fund that
had already distributed four times its LPs’ capital by mid-2000. Using
the conservative figure of five partners during the time that 2000 IPOs
were being funded, that means Matrix partners had $65 million each to
work with. (We did not include Matrix VI, a $304 million fund that was
only 30% invested as of June 30 last year.)
Kleiner VIII in 1996 was a $299 million fund that had returned 12
times its LPs’ capital by mid-2000, according to Lisson. Kleiner IX in
1999 was a $460 million fund that was 80% invested by mid-2000. Using
the conservative figure of 13 partners, Kleiner partners had $58 million
each to work with.
Now on to the 2000 results. Ten of Kleiner’s companies went public in
2000 (0.77 IPO per partner), compared to 4 for Matrix (0.80 IPO per
partner). Kleiner’s stake in those companies was worth about $2.3
billion when the lock-up period expired (one company, Cosine
Communications, is still in lock-up, and Kleiner’s stake in the company
is worth about $100 million). Matrix’s stake in its four IPOs was worth
about $1.6 billion when they came out of lock-up. That gives Matrix a
per-partner return of $320 million, and Kleiner $177 million, giving the
edge in per-partner wealth creation to Matrix.
A few caveats on those results. First, we measured performance in the
IPO market only; we did not look at acquisitions, the number of which
often exceeds IPOs in a given year. Second, Kleiner has two health care
partners, according to Malven. Since health care companies had a tough
year in the IPO market last year (Kleiner had no health care IPOs),
reporting the results based on IT partners only raises Kleiner’s
per-partner wealth creation to $209 million. We certainly want our top
VCs to focus on the future of health care regardless of market
conditions, and there’s been quite a debate going on within the venture
capital industry about IT versus health care investing. The third caveat
is that Kleiner IX is the newest of the funds measured, so that too
could give Matrix an edge. But don’t feel too bad for Kleiner; according
to Lisson, 6-year-old Kleiner VII was the best-performing venture fund
last year, still riding high on its monster hit Juniper Networks
(NASDAQ:JNPR). That fund has returned more than 20 times its limited
partners’ capital.
Matrix’s big hit of 2000 was Arrowpoint Communications, which netted
Matrix $1 billion when it was acquired by Cisco (Nasdaq:CSCO) in June.
Kleiner had holdings in three IPOs that were worth $500 million or more
when they came out of lock up: ONI Systems (Nasdaq:ONIS), Handspring
(Nasdaq:HAND) and Corvis (Nasdaq:CORV).
It’s not clear when or if the VCs sold shares in the IPOs. Cisco’s
stock, for example, has declined almost 40% since the Arrowpoint deal
closed. Kleiner’s biggest winners have held their value since the
lock-up period expired, but both companies had holdings that declined
substantially from their lock-up expiration price.
Both firms also had about $2 billion each in 1999 IPOs that came out
of lock-up in 2000, giving Matrix the “Malven Metric” edge there too.
But as Lisson pointed out, “This is splitting hairs amidst the
pinnacle of the field. A fun, interesting and worthwhile analysis, but
the distinction makes no difference to investors in these funds. The
amounts of money involved are trivial when viewed in context, the
venture capital segment in the alternatives portion of an entire
portfolio. Nonetheless, the LPs of both Kleiner and Matrix can thank
their lucky stars to be in these funds. It is amazing how these and a
few other elite firms can put so much distance between themselves and
the rest of field, repeatedly, in bad times as well as good.”
And finally, a follow-up to last week’s column on Summit Partners,
the most recent firm to join the elite $2 billion fund club. Lisson had
this to say of Summit: “As a private equity investor, Summit can
outperform some early-stage VCs, the reverse of how it’s supposed to
work. Now that’s a firm where unquestionably ‘there’s something in the
water’ consistently over the years.”
Corey Ostman of Alert-IPO and Mary Evelyn Arnold of VC Buzz provided research for this article.
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V I R G I N I A :
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE CITY OF RICHMOND
John Marshall Courts Building
400 North Ninth Street
STEPHEN N. LISSON, )
)
Petitioner, )
)
- ) Case No.: HQ-2029-4
)
VIRGINIA RETIREMENT SYSTEM )
)
and )
)
WILLIAM H. LEIGHTY, )
Respondents. )
ORDER
On the 30
th day of October, 2001, came the parties in
person and by counsel upon the Petition; upon the Grounds of Defense;
upon the Demurrers; upon evidence heard ore tenus; upon the
representation of the parties that a settlement had been reached and was
argued by counsel.
UPON CONSIDERATION WHEREOF, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s Petition
is sufficient to state a cause of action; that the Demurrers should be
overruled; that the parties have arrived at a settlement whereby: (1)
Respondents have agreed to pay to Petitioner the sum of Seven Thousand
Dollars and
no/100 ($7,000.00); (2) the Petitioner has agreed
to a dismissal with prejudice of all of his outstanding claims against
Respondents; and (3) Respondents have agreed that the dismissal of
claims by Petitioner shall not prejudice any right he has or may have to
obtain documents from Respondents subsequent to October 30, 2001,
whether such requests for documents be for the same documents previously
requested or documents similar thereto or documents of any nature
whatesoever.
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed with prejudice;
And this cause is hereby removed from the docket and placed among the ended causes.
ENTER: / /
__________________________________
Judge
We Ask For This:
____________________________p.q.
Larry A. Pochucha, Esquire
Attorney for Stephen N. Lisson
VSB No. 15674
COATES & DAVENPORT
5206 Markel Road
P.O. Box 11787
Richmond, Virginia 23230
(804) 285-7000
Facsimile: (804) 285-2849
___________________________p.d.
Michael Jackson, Esquire
Attorney for Virginia Retirement System
Assistant Attorney General
State of Virginia
900 E. Main Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219
(804) 786-6055
Facsimile: (804) 786-0781
____________________________p.d.
Robert A. Dybing, Esquire
Attorney for William H. Leighty
Shuford, Rubin & Gibney, P.C.
P.O. Box 675
Suite 1250, Seven Hundred Building
Richmond, Virginia 23218
Office (804) 648-4442
Telefax (804) 648-4450
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Monday, January 26, 2015
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Venture Capital Financing Is Further Sapped by Events – NYTimes …
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/26/…/26VENT.html
The New York TimesSep 26, 2001 –
Steve N.
Lisson, editor and publisher of InsiderVC.com, said recent events were reminiscent of the time around the gulf war, when the industry
…
New Enterprise Is Huge and Proud of It (washingtonpost.com)
http://www.washingtonpost.com › … ›
The Dealmakers
The Washington PostDec 6, 2004 –
Steve Lisson, the editor of InsiderVC.com, takes a dim view of NEA’s size.
… of smaller funds,” said Lisson, whose company provides analysis of
…
Find Pickup Basketball Games – steve.lisson – Nofouls
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stevelissonHow to find local basketball courts and pick-up basketball games in my area.
Forbes.com – Magazine Article
http://www.forbes.com/asap/2001/0910/022_print.html
ForbesSep 10, 2001 – But venture capitalists had better keep investing, warns
Steve Lisson, who runs the popular InsiderVC.com. According to data tracker
…
Pa. pension data leave questions about returns – Philly.com
articles.philly.com/…/25443104_1_pension-system-retirement-investmen…Oct 13, 2005 –
Steve Lisson,
publisher of the Texas-based private-equity newsletter InsiderVC.com,
questioned the teachers’ system’s basis for not disclosing
…
Matrix Partners | Matrix Partners
http://www.matrixpartners.com/press…/matrix_edges_kleiner/
Matrix PartnersJan 29, 2001 – Using the data of
Steve Lisson, editor of InsiderVC.com, who tracks VCs’ performance and considers Matrix and Kleiner the top VCs, we
…
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LISSON STEVE
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Wednesday, January 14, 2015
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Steve Lisson | Stephen Lisson | StephenNLisson | Stephen N. Lisson | Austin Texas | Austin TX: Stephen N. Lisson: Waltham’s Matrix Leading Venture Pack on Both – Boston.com
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Wednesday, January 14, 2015
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Stephen N. Lisson
Waltham’s Matrix Leading Venture Pack on Both – Boston.com
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/reprints/111200_matrix/
The Boston Globe
Nov 12, 2000 – Stephen N. Lisson, a writer in Austin, Texas, tracks
top venture players on his Web site, insiderVC .com, much to the chagrin
of the venture firms …
Data Packet: Net Loss – New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/…/23iht-btloss23_ed2_.html
The New York Times
Mar 23, 2001 – Get unlimited access to NYTimes.com and NYTimes apps. …
that VCs are getting more aggressive,” said Stephen Lisson, editor and
publisher ..
Past SXSW Interactive Festival Speakers | SXSW 2014
sxsw.com/interactive/sessions/past-speakers
South by Southwest
Jill Abramson, The New York Times (2012) Michelle Accardi …… Charles
Duhigg, New York Times/Random House (2012) …… Stephen Lisson, INITIATE!!
(1997)
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Steve Lisson | Stephen Lisson | Stephen N. Lisson | Austin Texas
Transparency. Let’s have a round of applause for
CalPers, the giant state pension fund, for transparency. Beth Healy of
the Boston Globe (8/17/2001) reports
Money managers aghast that
pension investor shows returns, rankings. It’s a report card that has
rocked the secretive venture capital world, and one that even the `A’
students didn’t care to see displayed on the refrigerator. Calpers, the
giant California pension fund that sets trends for many large investors,
has posted on its Web site the performance of every venture or buyout
fund in which it’s invested for the past decade. Firms typically guard
these numbers carefully, but the Calpers chart even says which funds are
meeting expectations, and which are disappointments. … The industry
buzz around the report stems from the secrecy with which venture firms
and buyout artists guard the specifics of their returns. Virtually every
firm claims ”top quartile” performance, and the numbers they give out
are suspect, venture analysts say. Steve Lisson of Austin, Texas, on his
controversial Web site, InsiderVC.com, tracks venture returns by doing
his own calculations on venture portfolios. He is the only independent
source on such numbers and has drawn fire from some venture capitalists
for breaking the code of silence. … over the long term, Calpers has been
doing something right. As of March 31, its average annual return for 10
years of private equity investing was 17.5%. The Wilshire 2500 Index, a
broad stock market benchmark, was up 13.9% in that period. Would that the federal government would do the same with alleged investment programs like SBIR.
Carl Nelson Consulting
http://www.carl-nelson.com/government2001.htm
Published by Carl Nelson Consulting, Inc, 1325 18th St NW, Washington DC 20036
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What’s a VC to Do?
Forbes.com
What’s a VC to Do?
Shelley Pannill, Forbes ASAP, 09.10.01
Someone’s always looking for a bargain.
As thousands of new economy startups crashed and burned this past year,
speculation mounted that the venture capitalists they once enriched were
now cautiously sitting on pots of gold and playing golf. But the VCs we
talked to say it’s only the limited partners, the investors behind the
venture funds, who get to perfect their putts.
So what are these high-powered moneylenders up to now?
Damage control. VCs, like the rest of us, have lost a lot of money
lately. Some 25% are expected to go out of business over the next
several years. “Sometimes your widget doesn’t widge,” says Alan Salzman,
founding partner at VantagePoint Venture Partners. He should know. His
firm recently faced the grim task of writing severance checks after one
bankrupt portfolio company’s management team had squandered its money.
Then there’s the job of smoothing things out at companies that survived
but were merged, downsized, or acquired. Says Philip Gianos of InterWest
Partners: “I’m acting like a marriage counselor, which is a full-time
job right now.”
Scouring the ocean floor. Last year, says one observer, “You felt lucky
to be able to invest in a new technology startup.” This year, VCs get to
play God, waiting to invest until impoverished companies are desperate
for cash. “I’ve been out bargain shopping,” says Heidi Roizen of
Softbank Venture Partners, sipping chardonnay on a rolling lawn at the
Atherton, California, home of a fellow VC. “I can’t believe these
valuations!”
Revisiting old friendships. Last year’s “shootouts” for deals have
subsided. VCs are again finding synergies with competitors. “The
tourists are gone,” says Accel Partners über investor Jim Breyer,
alluding to the rush of cash-happy hobbyists–both individuals and
companies–combing the landscape for gold in recent years.
Business as usual. Sort of. VCs are doing what they do best: investing
in startups, although the pace has slowed. According to research firm
Venture Economics, VC investments have fallen by nearly two-thirds, from
$27.2 billion in Q2 last year to $10.6 billion in Q2 this year. Still,
they’re actually spending more this year in some sectors, such as
wireless, biotechnology, fiber optics, and data storage. E-commerce, of
course, was the big loser, with VC investing sinking from $210 million
in the first quarter of last year to $3.3 million by the fourth quarter.
But venture capitalists had better keep investing, warns Steve Lisson,
who runs the popular InsiderVC.com. According to data tracker
VentureOne, 27 venture capital firms have completed raising funds of
more than $1 billion each since the start of the dot-com doldrums in
spring 2000. Says Lisson: “They’ve got to use it or lose it.”
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Financial Investors? Us?
InsiderVC.com pierces the VC industry’s verbal fog.
1 April 01 12:14, Tsafrir Bashan
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas, Steve Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas
Anyone carefully following the venture capital industry in Israel and
overseas recognizes the routine. Managing partners talk at length and
with great passion, but with very little substance. They gossip
endlessly about the industry. What about the industry’s numbers? “We
don’t disclose private data,” is the stock reply from industry players.
Today, for example, everyone knows that the situation is bad, but it is
hard to say who exactly is in a bad position. You won’t find a fund
partner talking animatedly about a company shutting down or about a down
round. The most you can expect is an admission that not everything is
perfect.
The absence of data is both odd and entertaining, particularly for an
industry in which capital, finances, and yield are the key words.
Without figures on the amount of a company’s holdings or valuations, the
pompous phrase, “added value,” is all the venture capital industry has
left to talk about. It is difficult to find a financial industry at any
point in history that has provided so few figures. (Venture capital is a
professional investment industry, regardless of how many partners talk
about opening doors and assistance in recruiting executives).
Against this rather frustrating background, it is worth consulting the
US web site insiderVC.com. The site provides data for companies in the
industry, such as profit and loss allocations between the general
partner and the investors (the carry), the exact rate of management
fees, and exact investments and valuations for portfolio companies at
the various financing rounds. Of course, the site also includes
derivative data, such as the internal rate of return (IRR) and the
realization ratio. In other words, it provides the tools needed to
compare various organizations and even different funds within the same
organization, information you will not get from your local venture
capital management partner.
In order to gain access to all this data, you have to pay a considerable
fee, but you can get a preview of the statistics and a sample of site
editor Stephen Lisson’s sharp tongue free of charge. You won’t find
better material on the web.
Published by Israel’s Business Arena on March 29, 2001
Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX
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Transparency. Let’s have a round of applause for
CalPers, the giant state pension fund, for transparency. Beth Healy of
the Boston Globe (8/17/2001) reports
Money managers aghast that
pension investor shows returns, rankings. It’s a report card that has
rocked the secretive venture capital world, and one that even the `A’
students didn’t care to see displayed on the refrigerator. Calpers, the
giant California pension fund that sets trends for many large investors,
has posted on its Web site the performance of every venture or buyout
fund in which it’s invested for the past decade. Firms typically guard
these numbers carefully, but the Calpers chart even says which funds are
meeting expectations, and which are disappointments. … The industry
buzz around the report stems from the secrecy with which venture firms
and buyout artists guard the specifics of their returns. Virtually every
firm claims ”top quartile” performance, and the numbers they give out
are suspect, venture analysts say. Steve Lisson of Austin, Texas, on his
controversial Web site, InsiderVC.com, tracks venture returns by doing
his own calculations on venture portfolios. He is the only independent
source on such numbers and has drawn fire from some venture capitalists
for breaking the code of silence. … over the long term, Calpers has been
doing something right. As of March 31, its average annual return for 10
years of private equity investing was 17.5%. The Wilshire 2500 Index, a
broad stock market benchmark, was up 13.9% in that period. Would that the federal government would do the same with alleged investment programs like SBIR.
Carl Nelson Consulting
http://www.carl-nelson.com/government2001.htm
Published by Carl Nelson Consulting, Inc, 1325 18th St NW, Washington DC 20036
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Posted by Steve Lisson Austin TX at 12:35 PM
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http://stephennlisson.blogspot.com/2014/01/data-packet-net-loss.html
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin TX Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N.
Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX Thursday, January 16, 2014 Data Packet:
Net Loss The New York Times This copy is for your personal,
noncommercial use only. You can order presentation-ready copies for
distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, please click here
or use the “Reprints” tool that appears next to any article. Visit
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now. » March 23, 2001 Data Packet: Net Loss Free money: A year ago,
venture capitalists were outbidding each other for stakes in fledgling
companies. Now, as failures mount, venture firms are extracting new
concessions from money-seeking entrepreneurs. “We’re finding we’re
really able to insist” on new conditions to limit potential losses, said
Tom Hirschfeld, managing director at J. & W. Seligman & Co.,
which manages about $1.8 billion in venture funds. Its investments
include Inktomi Corp., ScreamingMedia Inc. and Stamps.com Inc. In four
of Seligman’s five most recent investments, which the firm did not
identify, it demanded and received a “liquidation preference” — a
priority claim on assets if a business fails, Mr. Hirschfeld said. Three
of the five companies set a minimum price on Seligman’s holdings should
the start-up go public. That’s a stark reversal from when start-ups
commanded ever-higher prices on their way to a quick initial public
offering. “There is no question that VCs are getting more aggressive,”
said Stephen Lisson, editor and publisher of InsiderVC.com, a research
firm. “Provisions such as these are among the ways firms attempt to
ensure upside for their funds.” Copyright 2014 The New York Times
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Austin Texas Sunday, December 1, 2013 Rumors of Benchmark’s Demise
Greatly Exaggerated – Steve Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson Rumors of
Benchmark’s Demise Greatly Exaggerated – Steve Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson
Steve Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS
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LISSON, Lisson, Steve Steve Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, STEPHEN N.
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TX, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE
N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC, INSIDERVC, INSIDERVC.COM Rumors
of Benchmark’s Demise Greatly Exaggerated For weeks, rumors have been
circulating in the VC community that Benchmark Capital’s third fund,
Benchmark III, was in trouble, hit hard by losses in e-commerce
companies like 1-800-Flowers.com. Benchmark denies the rumors, and its
limited partners say they never received the rumored letter that the
fund was in trouble. An analysis of Benchmark’s portfolio appears to
back up the firm, which despite the rumors, may not just be surviving,
but thriving. Benchmark declined to discuss details, but the firm’s
holdings as of June 30 were provided by Steve Lisson, the editor of
InsiderVC.com, who tracks the performance of leading venture firms for
high-paying clients. At first glance, Benchmark III had its share of
overvalued B2C e-commerce firms like 1-800-Flowers.com (Nasdaq:FLWS) and
Living.com. 1-800-Flowers.com was the fund’s biggest investment, at
$18.9 million, and had been marked down to $8.1 million on June 30. The
stock price has declined about 30% since then. “There are many private
scenarios just like this public one, whereby even if the company can be
kept afloat long enough to enjoy some success and eventually make it to a
liquidity event, the venture investors will lose money,” Lisson said.
But a closer look at Benchmark III reveals a fund with several potential
winners, including Internet Data Exchange System company CoreExpress,
an intelligent optical networking play. That investment alone could
return limited partners’ money. Other potential winners include Sigma
Networks, Keen.com, Netigy and BridgeSpan. And Benchmark’s newest fund,
Benchmark IV, is already showing the markings of a winner, thanks to
investments in Loudcloud, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen’s latest
venture, and TellMe Networks, whose valuation no doubt went up in its
recent $125 million funding round. Lisson said the Benchmark rumors
reflect a misunderstanding of how venture funds operate. “There’s a
reason these are 10-year funds,” he said. “It’s called risk and
illiquidity. The one monster hit could happen three, four or five years
out. You can be wrong about 39 of 40 companies, and the market
uncooperative, as long as one is an Inktomi. That is the history of this
industry: one monster hit returning the entire fund. Singles and
doubles won’t get you there.” At two years of age, Benchmark III still
has plenty of time to deliver a big winner. In the meantime, the firm’s
limited partners can enjoy the returns from Benchmark II, a
three-year-old fund that has already distributed five times its partners
capital, by Lisson’s estimate. Benchmark II boasted big winners like
Handspring (Nasdaq:HAND), Critical Path (Nasdaq:CPTH), Red Hat
(Nasdaq:RHAT), and Scient (Nasdaq:SCNT). Yes, Scient. Benchmark had the
foresight to distribute shares of the Internet consultant to its limited
partners at 200-300 times the firm’s cost. Benchmark isn’t any
different from other venture firms, most of whom “drank the Kool-aid” of
seemingly easy dot-com money, hoping the stock market would hold up
long enough to vindicate those investments. But Lisson expects that some
other firms won’t hold up as well. He expects a shakeout in the
industry similar to the one that hit the industry from 1987-1991, when
venture firms formed during the 1980s averaged single-digit returns, and
roughly 20% of new entrants couldn’t return their partners’ capital.
VCs’ own fundraising declined from $4.2 billion in 1987 to $1.3 billion
in 1991. The $4 billion level of capital coming into the industry wasn’t
reached again until 1995. “This is what’s supposed to happen in a
downturn,” Lisson said. “People who shouldn’t be in the business, who
contributed to the excesses and didn’t know what they were doing, will
be forced out. It’s not like this is the first time we’ve seen too many
new entrants into the industry, or too much money chasing too few
deals.” And the ones that survive will have a chance to prove themselves
in tough times, the ultimate mark of a winner. Lisson said a few
venture firms stand out among their peers. Matrix Partners, Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers and Sequoia can normally be found at the
top of the charts in each vintage year they raise a fund, he said,
proving that “something’s in the water” at those firms. And he gives Oak
high marks for consistency over a long period of time. But even top
firms have an occasional weak fund, Lisson said. “But by the time you
can make that judgment about a fund, you’ll have raised another fund and
shown some early progress,” he said. Meaning that even if Benchmark III
was a weak fund, Benchmark IV could keep the firm in its limited
partners’ good graces for some time to come. “The moral is consistent
performance over time relative to same vintage-year peers,” Lisson said.
“You’re never as good or as bad as your current press clippings might
indicate. The real test of Benchmark’s mettle will come when we can
fairly evaluate whether the firm manages through and makes money, not
just with small funds during the best times in the industry’s history,
but with larger funds in the tough times ahead as well.”
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– Steve Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Travis County, TX 512
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LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC,
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LINKED IN, TWITTER, Elite VC giants still investing San Jose Mercury
News Matt Marshall May 31, 2001 Now that they’ve gone gorilla size, will
the elite venture capital firms help stem the downturn in venture
capital investing? After the March 2000 market crash, elite VCs
scrambled to triage their portfolios. Only recently have they started to
peer out of the graveyard. But they’ve undergone a profound change in
nature: They’ve become monsters. This is good if you’re an entrepreneur
shooting for the moon. It’s fatal if not. In 1995, only one top-tier
fund, TA Associates, had raised a billion dollars. But since the crash,
15 top-tier firms have raised funds of that size or more. Many —
including Worldview Technology Partners, Greylock, Austin Ventures and
Oak Investment Partners — announced their new funds this year, well
after most of the market damage. Steve Lisson, of InsiderVC.com, says
the amount of funds raised since the crash goes against the “drought”
thesis. “The perception that there’s going to be less venture investing
is totally misplaced,” he says. “These VCs need to get into lucrative
investment opportunities, and they’re going to want larger stakes.
They’re going to have to step on the gas even more.” Similarly, he adds,
if an entrepreneur offers an opportunity for a “mega” investment, he’ll
be able to negotiate more favorable terms, because the big venture
capitalists will all want in. On the downside, entrepreneurs that don’t
show home-run promise will struggle. True, some VCs that raised large
funds say they have slowed their investment pace. Flip Gianos, partner
at InterWest Partners, said his firm hadn’t expected the magnitude of
the downturn when it raised its fund. If it takes waiting a year for
strong opportunities to come along, VCs will wait, he says. Others
counter that size has forced them to invest more in later-stage
start-ups because they soak up more money. Michael Darby, general
partner at Battery Ventures, says his firm still focuses on early stage
deals, but “in this environment, the fact that we want to deploy capital
means we’re looking at those later-stage deals.” There’s another reason
for hope after the crash, Lisson says. Many VC firms have been able to
negotiate stellar terms with their investors — even better than those
they negotiated just a couple of years ago. That’s also a sign that
investors still have faith in the VCs, he said. STEVE.LISSON, STEVE
LISSON, STEPHEN LISSON, STEPHAN N. LISSON, STEPHAN LISSON, LISSON
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LINKED IN, TWITTER, TUMBLR, PINTEREST Universal, EMI Sue Napster
Investor Record labels say firm enabled infringement. Critics say the
move may deter venture capitalists. April 23, 2003|Joseph Menn | Times
Staff Writer Unable to extract their pound of flesh from bankrupt
Napster Inc., two of the five major record labels are suing the venture
capitalists who backed the defunct song-swapping service that turned
music industry economics upside down. Universal Music and EMI filed a
federal lawsuit against Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and two of the
San Francisco firm’s general partners, Hank Barry and John Hummer, in
Los Angeles on Monday. The suit claims that they contributed to the
copyright violations by Napster’s tens of millions of users. In addition
to seeking $150,000 per violation, the suit asks for punitive damages.
It also is intended to dissuade investment in any of the song-swapping
services that have risen in Napster’s place. “Businesses, as well as
those individuals or entities who control them, premised on massive
copyright infringement of works created by artists should face the legal
consequences for their actions,” the record labels said in a statement.
The suit may mark the first time an outside party has targeted a
venture firm for wrongdoing by a company in which it invested. “I don’t
know if this has ever happened before,” said Jeanne Metzger, vice
president of the National Venture Capital Assn. The trade group and
others warned that even if the labels lose the case, the fact that they
sued will deter institutional investors from taking on a high level of
risk with new companies. “It’s going to create an enormous amount of
reluctance to get involved in anything that could draw litigation from
the content industries,” said Silicon Valley intellectual property
lawyer Mark Radcliffe. Barry and Hummer didn’t respond to telephone and
e-mail messages seeking comment Tuesday. Barry served as Napster’s chief
executive for more than a year, and both men sat on Napster’s board.
The suit claims that Hummer Winblad knew Napster was enabling massive
infringement and that the firm controlled Napster’s activities with its
general partners in the chief executive and director positions and
through its $13-million investment in May 2000. The investment was made
five months after the record industry — including the two labels — sued
Napster for enabling infringement. Napster filed for bankruptcy
protection in June 2002. Lawyers not involved in the case said Hummer
Winblad has two reasonable defenses. First, Napster hadn’t yet lost the
record industry suit when the firm invested. Second, directors and
investors are rarely held liable for the acts of their companies. In
those cases in which individuals are held responsible, they typically
own 100% of the company at fault. The suit “is stretching contributory
infringement way beyond where it’s ever gone,” said Wayne State
University copyright law professor Jessica Litman. “I assume the purpose
is to enhance the already significant chill discouraging people from
investing in businesses that challenge the business models of the
entrenched market leaders in the entertainment industry.” Indeed, a
federal lawsuit filed by a music producer against Barry, Hummer Winblad
and others was dismissed after a judge found that the accusations —
similar to those in the record labels’ suit — were too vague and that
there was nothing in the copyright law to punish people who assist an
entity that assists others in breaking the law. “Courts have
consistently held that liability for contributory infringement requires
substantial participation in a specific act of direct infringement,”
U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel wrote in that case. But the two
record labels may have evidence of specific actions by the venture
firm’s principals. And Hummer Winblad could be hurt by the fact that
Napster lost most of its court battles. The plaintiffs have “a
reasonable shot at the officer. I think the director is a little
tougher, and the shareholder theory is really tough,” said Radcliffe,
who represents technology and entertainment firms. Barry and Hummer
anticipated that they might be sued and tried to negotiate protection
from legal consequences when German media firm Bertelsmann was planning
to buy Napster early last year. Those talks foundered, and Bertelsmann
itself has been sued for its investment in Napster. The venture capital
trade association complained that with such actions against investors,
“the ability of entrenched industries to deter investment in
next-generation technologies has profoundly anti-competitive and
anti-innovative implications.” But not everyone agreed that the labels’
suit will change how Silicon Valley firms invest. As the suit notes,
other venture firms had deep concerns about Napster’s legality and
didn’t invest. “Top firms don’t take their cue from Hummer,” said Steve
Lisson, publisher of InsiderVC.com. Los Angeles Times Articles Copyright
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How to rate a venture capital firm
By Lawrence Aragon
April 16, 2001
Red Herring explains how it came up with its list of top venture capital firms
for the 2001 version of the Red Herring 100: Kleiner Perkins Caufield and
Byers, Accel Partners, Matrix Partners, Sequoia Capital Partners, and runner-
ups Oak Investment Partners, Mayfield, Greylock, Menlo Ventures, North
Bridge Venture Partners, and Benchmark Capital.
Venture capital is like baseball without the stats. There are great arguments
about who’s the best — and worst — VC around. But unlike baseball fans, those
who follow venture capital have scant data on which to base their opinions.
Until now.
As part of our annual Red Herring 100, we set out to determine the top ten VC
firms using the best metrics we could come up with. To our knowledge, this is
the first time anyone has come up with a list based on more than a single
metric, such as the internal rate of return (IRR).
Before we get into each of the ten factors we examined, allow us a brief
explanation as to why we didn’t include the most common metric: IRR. IRR is
a number determined by each VC firm, and although it’s bandied about
frequently, it can be easily tweaked to make a firm look like it’s doing better
than it actually is. It isn’t uncommon for a VC that isn’t performing very well to
inflate its IRR by counting its own “carry,” the money it makes from
investments, into its IRR.
The only real way to know how a VC firm is performing is to look at its
disbursements to its limited partners (LPs). This is the actual stock or money
that VCs get from a liquidity event — that is, a portfolio company’s IPO or its
sale to another company. The only problem is, VCs don’t want to share this
information.
Enter Steve Lisson, editor of InsiderVC.com, a venture capital research firm.
Mr. Lisson has been able to infiltrate the closemouthed community of LPs and
get its members to share disbursement figures. We asked Mr. Lisson to come
up with a list of the best ten VCs in the country, based on disbursements to LPs
and how consistently they have returned the big bucks to LPs.
Here, then, are the top ten venture capital firms: Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers, Accel Partners, Matrix Partners, Sequoia Capital Partners, Oak
Investment Partners, Mayfield, Greylock, Menlo Ventures, North Bridge
Venture Partners, and Benchmark Capital. The top four firms (the first four
listed) made it into the Red Herring 100. Now, on to our criteria: underneath
the chart just below we review in depth the ten factors we rated the companies
on.
1. Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers 10 10 10 6 10 9 10 5 10 109.09
2.Accel Partners 9 9 8.58 10 9 9 5 10 108.77
3. Matrix Partners 9 10 10 9 5 10 10 10 4 6 8.36
4. Sequoia Capital Partners 6 10 9.5 8 10 7.5 10 5.5 2 4 7.14
(tied) Oak Investment
Partners 8 10 6.5 10 2 5 10 7 2 107.14
(tied) Mayfield 7 10 9.5 7 10 8 10 6 0 4 7.14
7. Greylock 6 10 10 9 4 9 10 7 6 0 7.00
8. Menlo Ventures 8 10 5.5 8 3 10 6.5 7.5 2 2 6.41
9. North Bridge Venture
Partners 7 3.5 10 7 6 9 8 9.5 0 2 6.27
10. Benchmark Capital 7 3 6.5 7 3 8 1 4 10 2 5.32
Average7.7 8.55 8.6 7.9 6.3 8.45 8.45 6.65 4.6 5 7.26
1 The disbursement category is weighted twice that of other categories. Data from Steve Lisson,
editor of InsiderVC.com.
2 Operating experience counts VP level and above.
Disbursements.
Mr. Lisson gave a score of 10 to just one VC firm: Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers. Benchmark Capital, which has had some monster hits in the past couple
of years, scored a 7, because it has only been around for six years.
Longevity.
In the venture business, age counts for a lot. It means a firm has been battle-
tested and has done well enough to get its LPs to continue investing. We took
each firm’s number of years in business and divided that figure in half to come
up with a score (with a maximum score of 10). Six firms earned a 10. Two firms
came up short: Benchmark and North Bridge Venture Partners, with scores of
3 and 3.5, respectively.
Pressure to invest.
A general partner is better off if there isn’t pressure to put a lot of money to
work. We divided the amount of a firm’s current fund size by its number of
general partners, then assigned a value to the resulting figure. After talking to
several VCs, we determined that $90 million per partner was reasonable to
assign a score of 10. We gave a 9 to anyone managing $110 million, an 8 to
those managing $130 million, and so on.
VC experience.
This should be self-explanatory as to why it’s important. We gave general
partners with 15 years or more of experience a score of 10. Those with 12 to 14
years received a 9, and so forth. Oak Investment Partners came out on top in
this category, with an average of 17 years for its partners. Even though Kleiner
has at least three partners with more than 20 years of experience, its score got
knocked down to a 7 because it recently added some technology executives to
its partnership.
Operating experience.
With so many portfolio companies in trouble these days, every VC firm needs
partners who’ve been in the real world to advise troubled companies. We gave
each firm a point for any general partner with operating experience, plus a
bonus point for any partner who qualified as a “star.” General partners who fell
into the star category include Kleiner’s Ray Lane, former president and chief
operating officer (some say the de facto CEO) of Oracle, and Mayfield’s Janice
Roberts, who ran Palm when it was a division of 3Com.
Board seats.
Six boards is the maximum number you can sit on and still actually contribute
valuable time and energy, we’re told by veteran VCs. Menlo Ventures and
Matrix Partners were the only firms whose partners sat on an average of six or
fewer boards, giving them perfect 10s. We gave firms whose partners held an
average of seven to eight board seats a score of 9, and so on. Oak fared the
worst: its six general partners sit on an average of 12 boards each.
IPOs/Sales.
This is one of those categories that VCs like to brag about, but it can often be
misleading. Two firms may be in the same IPO, but one may own 15 percent of
a company while another owns 1 percent. The only real way to know how well a
VC did in an IPO is through disbursement figures. Still, we felt we should give
VCs some credit for liquidity events. We gave a firm one point for every $1
billion in value, with a maximum of 10 points for $10 billion. IPO figures were
based on the close on the first day of trading. Sale prices were based on the
value on the day the deal closed. A lot of moonshot IPOs have fallen back to
earth, so this category is squishy at best.
Lack of portfolio problems.
Matrix was the only firm on our list that had no failed or troubled companies.
We gave each firm 1 point for every failed company and half a point for every
company that had laid off employees in the past year. We then subtracted that
total from 10. Benchmark fared the worst in this category with a score of 4.
Blame it on those Internet bets like Living.com, MVP.com, and Send.com.
RH 100 factor (2000 and 2001).
VCs deserve credit for portfolio companies that show great promise. Because
the staff of Red Herring spent weeks vetting all of the companies that made the
Red Herring 100 list, we used the private portion of the list (50 companies) in
2000 and 2001 as a basis for determining potential hits. For every portfolio
company on the Red Herring 100, we gave a firm 2 points, with a maximum of
10. Kleiner and Accel Partners were the only firms to receive 10s for both years.
Kleiner had the most companies on this year’s list: Zaplet, Epoch, Synaptics,
SmartPipes, Asera, and Bowstreet.
As much time as we spent thinking about how to create a top ten VC list, and
then double- and triple-checking the data, we’d be nave if we didn’t expect
some VCs to take issue with our numbers or our methodology. So, don’t feel
shy about expressing your opinion.
Write to laragon@redherring.com.
Note: In the “Top 10 VC Firms” on page 185 of issue 97, Menlo Ventures
should have been ranked No. 8 and North Bridge Ventures should have been
No. 9. In addition, we did not make it clear that three firms tied for 4th place:
Sequoia Capital Partners, Oak Investment Partners, and Mayfield. The data
is correct here.
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December 26, 2014 Steve Lisson Austin Texas,
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N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX Thursday, January 16, 2014 Data
Packet: Net Loss The New York Times This copy is for your personal,
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now. » March 23, 2001 Data Packet: Net Loss Free money: A year ago,
venture capitalists were outbidding each other for stakes in fledgling
companies. Now, as failures mount, venture firms are extracting new
concessions from money-seeking entrepreneurs. “We’re finding we’re
really able to insist” on new conditions to limit potential losses, said
Tom Hirschfeld, managing director at J. & W. Seligman & Co.,
which manages about $1.8 billion in venture funds. Its investments
include Inktomi Corp., ScreamingMedia Inc. and Stamps.com Inc. In four
of Seligman’s five most recent investments, which the firm did not
identify, it demanded and received a “liquidation preference” — a
priority claim on assets if a business fails, Mr. Hirschfeld said. Three
of the five companies set a minimum price on Seligman’s holdings should
the start-up go public. That’s a stark reversal from when start-ups
commanded ever-higher prices on their way to a quick initial public
offering. “There is no question that VCs are getting more aggressive,”
said Stephen Lisson, editor and publisher of InsiderVC.com, a research
firm. “Provisions such as these are among the ways firms attempt to
ensure upside for their funds.” Copyright 2014 The New York Times
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Austin Texas Sunday, December 1, 2013 Rumors of Benchmark’s Demise
Greatly Exaggerated – Steve Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson Rumors of
Benchmark’s Demise Greatly Exaggerated – Steve Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson
Steve Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS
COUNTY, TEXAS, (512), 512, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE,
LISSON, Lisson, Steve Steve Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, STEPHEN N.
LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS, (512), 512, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N.
LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, Lisson, Steve Steve Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN,
TX, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE
N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC, INSIDERVC, INSIDERVC.COM Rumors
of Benchmark’s Demise Greatly Exaggerated For weeks, rumors have been
circulating in the VC community that Benchmark Capital’s third fund,
Benchmark III, was in trouble, hit hard by losses in e-commerce
companies like 1-800-Flowers.com. Benchmark denies the rumors, and its
limited partners say they never received the rumored letter that the
fund was in trouble. An analysis of Benchmark’s portfolio appears to
back up the firm, which despite the rumors, may not just be surviving,
but thriving. Benchmark declined to discuss details, but the firm’s
holdings as of June 30 were provided by Steve Lisson, the editor of
InsiderVC.com, who tracks the performance of leading venture firms for
high-paying clients. At first glance, Benchmark III had its share of
overvalued B2C e-commerce firms like 1-800-Flowers.com (Nasdaq:FLWS) and
Living.com. 1-800-Flowers.com was the fund’s biggest investment, at
$18.9 million, and had been marked down to $8.1 million on June 30. The
stock price has declined about 30% since then. “There are many private
scenarios just like this public one, whereby even if the company can be
kept afloat long enough to enjoy some success and eventually make it to a
liquidity event, the venture investors will lose money,” Lisson said.
But a closer look at Benchmark III reveals a fund with several potential
winners, including Internet Data Exchange System company CoreExpress,
an intelligent optical networking play. That investment alone could
return limited partners’ money. Other potential winners include Sigma
Networks, Keen.com, Netigy and BridgeSpan. And Benchmark’s newest fund,
Benchmark IV, is already showing the markings of a winner, thanks to
investments in Loudcloud, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen’s latest
venture, and TellMe Networks, whose valuation no doubt went up in its
recent $125 million funding round. Lisson said the Benchmark rumors
reflect a misunderstanding of how venture funds operate. “There’s a
reason these are 10-year funds,” he said. “It’s called risk and
illiquidity. The one monster hit could happen three, four or five years
out. You can be wrong about 39 of 40 companies, and the market
uncooperative, as long as one is an Inktomi. That is the history of this
industry: one monster hit returning the entire fund. Singles and
doubles won’t get you there.” At two years of age, Benchmark III still
has plenty of time to deliver a big winner. In the meantime, the firm’s
limited partners can enjoy the returns from Benchmark II, a
three-year-old fund that has already distributed five times its partners
capital, by Lisson’s estimate. Benchmark II boasted big winners like
Handspring (Nasdaq:HAND), Critical Path (Nasdaq:CPTH), Red Hat
(Nasdaq:RHAT), and Scient (Nasdaq:SCNT). Yes, Scient. Benchmark had the
foresight to distribute shares of the Internet consultant to its limited
partners at 200-300 times the firm’s cost. Benchmark isn’t any
different from other venture firms, most of whom “drank the Kool-aid” of
seemingly easy dot-com money, hoping the stock market would hold up
long enough to vindicate those investments. But Lisson expects that some
other firms won’t hold up as well. He expects a shakeout in the
industry similar to the one that hit the industry from 1987-1991, when
venture firms formed during the 1980s averaged single-digit returns, and
roughly 20% of new entrants couldn’t return their partners’ capital.
VCs’ own fundraising declined from $4.2 billion in 1987 to $1.3 billion
in 1991. The $4 billion level of capital coming into the industry wasn’t
reached again until 1995. “This is what’s supposed to happen in a
downturn,” Lisson said. “People who shouldn’t be in the business, who
contributed to the excesses and didn’t know what they were doing, will
be forced out. It’s not like this is the first time we’ve seen too many
new entrants into the industry, or too much money chasing too few
deals.” And the ones that survive will have a chance to prove themselves
in tough times, the ultimate mark of a winner. Lisson said a few
venture firms stand out among their peers. Matrix Partners, Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers and Sequoia can normally be found at the
top of the charts in each vintage year they raise a fund, he said,
proving that “something’s in the water” at those firms. And he gives Oak
high marks for consistency over a long period of time. But even top
firms have an occasional weak fund, Lisson said. “But by the time you
can make that judgment about a fund, you’ll have raised another fund and
shown some early progress,” he said. Meaning that even if Benchmark III
was a weak fund, Benchmark IV could keep the firm in its limited
partners’ good graces for some time to come. “The moral is consistent
performance over time relative to same vintage-year peers,” Lisson said.
“You’re never as good or as bad as your current press clippings might
indicate. The real test of Benchmark’s mettle will come when we can
fairly evaluate whether the firm manages through and makes money, not
just with small funds during the best times in the industry’s history,
but with larger funds in the tough times ahead as well.”
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STEVE.LISSON, STEVE LISSON, STEPHAN N. LISSON, STEPHAN LISSON, STEVE
LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, TEXAS, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS,
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LINKED IN, TWITTER STEVE.LISSON, STEVE LISSON, STEPHEN LISSON, STEPHAN
N. LISSON, STEPHAN LISSON, LISSON STEPHAN, AUSTIN, TX, TEXAS, STEPHEN N.
LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON,
STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC, INSIDERVC, INSIDERVC.COM, (512),
STEPHEN.LISSON, FACEBOOK, LINKEDIN, LINKED IN, TWITTER, STEVE.LISSON,
STEVE LISSON, STEPHEN LISSON, STEPHAN N. LISSON, STEPHAN LISSON, LISSON
STEPHAN, AUSTIN, TX, TEXAS, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS,
LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC,
INSIDERVC, INSIDERVC.COM, (512), STEPHEN.LISSON, FACEBOOK, LINKEDIN,
LINKED IN, TWITTER, Elite VC giants still investing San Jose Mercury
News Matt Marshall May 31, 2001 Now that they’ve gone gorilla size, will
the elite venture capital firms help stem the downturn in venture
capital investing? After the March 2000 market crash, elite VCs
scrambled to triage their portfolios. Only recently have they started to
peer out of the graveyard. But they’ve undergone a profound change in
nature: They’ve become monsters. This is good if you’re an entrepreneur
shooting for the moon. It’s fatal if not. In 1995, only one top-tier
fund, TA Associates, had raised a billion dollars. But since the crash,
15 top-tier firms have raised funds of that size or more. Many —
including Worldview Technology Partners, Greylock, Austin Ventures and
Oak Investment Partners — announced their new funds this year, well
after most of the market damage. Steve Lisson, of InsiderVC.com, says
the amount of funds raised since the crash goes against the “drought”
thesis. “The perception that there’s going to be less venture investing
is totally misplaced,” he says. “These VCs need to get into lucrative
investment opportunities, and they’re going to want larger stakes.
They’re going to have to step on the gas even more.” Similarly, he adds,
if an entrepreneur offers an opportunity for a “mega” investment, he’ll
be able to negotiate more favorable terms, because the big venture
capitalists will all want in. On the downside, entrepreneurs that don’t
show home-run promise will struggle. True, some VCs that raised large
funds say they have slowed their investment pace. Flip Gianos, partner
at InterWest Partners, said his firm hadn’t expected the magnitude of
the downturn when it raised its fund. If it takes waiting a year for
strong opportunities to come along, VCs will wait, he says. Others
counter that size has forced them to invest more in later-stage
start-ups because they soak up more money. Michael Darby, general
partner at Battery Ventures, says his firm still focuses on early stage
deals, but “in this environment, the fact that we want to deploy capital
means we’re looking at those later-stage deals.” There’s another reason
for hope after the crash, Lisson says. Many VC firms have been able to
negotiate stellar terms with their investors — even better than those
they negotiated just a couple of years ago. That’s also a sign that
investors still have faith in the VCs, he said. STEVE.LISSON, STEVE
LISSON, STEPHEN LISSON, STEPHAN N. LISSON, STEPHAN LISSON, LISSON
STEPHAN, AUSTIN, TX, TEXAS, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS,
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LINKED IN, TWITTER, TUMBLR, PINTEREST Universal, EMI Sue Napster
Investor Record labels say firm enabled infringement. Critics say the
move may deter venture capitalists. April 23, 2003|Joseph Menn | Times
Staff Writer Unable to extract their pound of flesh from bankrupt
Napster Inc., two of the five major record labels are suing the venture
capitalists who backed the defunct song-swapping service that turned
music industry economics upside down. Universal Music and EMI filed a
federal lawsuit against Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and two of the
San Francisco firm’s general partners, Hank Barry and John Hummer, in
Los Angeles on Monday. The suit claims that they contributed to the
copyright violations by Napster’s tens of millions of users. In addition
to seeking $150,000 per violation, the suit asks for punitive damages.
It also is intended to dissuade investment in any of the song-swapping
services that have risen in Napster’s place. “Businesses, as well as
those individuals or entities who control them, premised on massive
copyright infringement of works created by artists should face the legal
consequences for their actions,” the record labels said in a statement.
The suit may mark the first time an outside party has targeted a
venture firm for wrongdoing by a company in which it invested. “I don’t
know if this has ever happened before,” said Jeanne Metzger, vice
president of the National Venture Capital Assn. The trade group and
others warned that even if the labels lose the case, the fact that they
sued will deter institutional investors from taking on a high level of
risk with new companies. “It’s going to create an enormous amount of
reluctance to get involved in anything that could draw litigation from
the content industries,” said Silicon Valley intellectual property
lawyer Mark Radcliffe. Barry and Hummer didn’t respond to telephone and
e-mail messages seeking comment Tuesday. Barry served as Napster’s chief
executive for more than a year, and both men sat on Napster’s board.
The suit claims that Hummer Winblad knew Napster was enabling massive
infringement and that the firm controlled Napster’s activities with its
general partners in the chief executive and director positions and
through its $13-million investment in May 2000. The investment was made
five months after the record industry — including the two labels — sued
Napster for enabling infringement. Napster filed for bankruptcy
protection in June 2002. Lawyers not involved in the case said Hummer
Winblad has two reasonable defenses. First, Napster hadn’t yet lost the
record industry suit when the firm invested. Second, directors and
investors are rarely held liable for the acts of their companies. In
those cases in which individuals are held responsible, they typically
own 100% of the company at fault. The suit “is stretching contributory
infringement way beyond where it’s ever gone,” said Wayne State
University copyright law professor Jessica Litman. “I assume the purpose
is to enhance the already significant chill discouraging people from
investing in businesses that challenge the business models of the
entrenched market leaders in the entertainment industry.” Indeed, a
federal lawsuit filed by a music producer against Barry, Hummer Winblad
and others was dismissed after a judge found that the accusations —
similar to those in the record labels’ suit — were too vague and that
there was nothing in the copyright law to punish people who assist an
entity that assists others in breaking the law. “Courts have
consistently held that liability for contributory infringement requires
substantial participation in a specific act of direct infringement,”
U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel wrote in that case. But the two
record labels may have evidence of specific actions by the venture
firm’s principals. And Hummer Winblad could be hurt by the fact that
Napster lost most of its court battles. The plaintiffs have “a
reasonable shot at the officer. I think the director is a little
tougher, and the shareholder theory is really tough,” said Radcliffe,
who represents technology and entertainment firms. Barry and Hummer
anticipated that they might be sued and tried to negotiate protection
from legal consequences when German media firm Bertelsmann was planning
to buy Napster early last year. Those talks foundered, and Bertelsmann
itself has been sued for its investment in Napster. The venture capital
trade association complained that with such actions against investors,
“the ability of entrenched industries to deter investment in
next-generation technologies has profoundly anti-competitive and
anti-innovative implications.” But not everyone agreed that the labels’
suit will change how Silicon Valley firms invest. As the suit notes,
other venture firms had deep concerns about Napster’s legality and
didn’t invest. “Top firms don’t take their cue from Hummer,” said Steve
Lisson, publisher of InsiderVC.com. Los Angeles Times Articles Copyright
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How to rate a venture capital firm
By Lawrence Aragon
April 16, 2001
Red Herring explains how it came up with its list of top venture capital firms
for the 2001 version of the Red Herring 100: Kleiner Perkins Caufield and
Byers, Accel Partners, Matrix Partners, Sequoia Capital Partners, and runner-
ups Oak Investment Partners, Mayfield, Greylock, Menlo Ventures, North
Bridge Venture Partners, and Benchmark Capital.
Venture capital is like baseball without the stats. There are great arguments
about who’s the best — and worst — VC around. But unlike baseball fans, those
who follow venture capital have scant data on which to base their opinions.
Until now.
As part of our annual Red Herring 100, we set out to determine the top ten VC
firms using the best metrics we could come up with. To our knowledge, this is
the first time anyone has come up with a list based on more than a single
metric, such as the internal rate of return (IRR).
Before we get into each of the ten factors we examined, allow us a brief
explanation as to why we didn’t include the most common metric: IRR. IRR is
a number determined by each VC firm, and although it’s bandied about
frequently, it can be easily tweaked to make a firm look like it’s doing better
than it actually is. It isn’t uncommon for a VC that isn’t performing very well to
inflate its IRR by counting its own “carry,” the money it makes from
investments, into its IRR.
The only real way to know how a VC firm is performing is to look at its
disbursements to its limited partners (LPs). This is the actual stock or money
that VCs get from a liquidity event — that is, a portfolio company’s IPO or its
sale to another company. The only problem is, VCs don’t want to share this
information.
Enter Steve Lisson, editor of InsiderVC.com, a venture capital research firm.
Mr. Lisson has been able to infiltrate the closemouthed community of LPs and
get its members to share disbursement figures. We asked Mr. Lisson to come
up with a list of the best ten VCs in the country, based on disbursements to LPs
and how consistently they have returned the big bucks to LPs.
Here, then, are the top ten venture capital firms: Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers, Accel Partners, Matrix Partners, Sequoia Capital Partners, Oak
Investment Partners, Mayfield, Greylock, Menlo Ventures, North Bridge
Venture Partners, and Benchmark Capital. The top four firms (the first four
listed) made it into the Red Herring 100. Now, on to our criteria: underneath
the chart just below we review in depth the ten factors we rated the companies
on.
1. Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers 10 10 10 6 10 9 10 5 10 109.09
2.Accel Partners 9 9 8.58 10 9 9 5 10 108.77
3. Matrix Partners 9 10 10 9 5 10 10 10 4 6 8.36
4. Sequoia Capital Partners 6 10 9.5 8 10 7.5 10 5.5 2 4 7.14
(tied) Oak Investment
Partners 8 10 6.5 10 2 5 10 7 2 107.14
(tied) Mayfield 7 10 9.5 7 10 8 10 6 0 4 7.14
7. Greylock 6 10 10 9 4 9 10 7 6 0 7.00
8. Menlo Ventures 8 10 5.5 8 3 10 6.5 7.5 2 2 6.41
9. North Bridge Venture
Partners 7 3.5 10 7 6 9 8 9.5 0 2 6.27
10. Benchmark Capital 7 3 6.5 7 3 8 1 4 10 2 5.32
Average7.7 8.55 8.6 7.9 6.3 8.45 8.45 6.65 4.6 5 7.26
1 The disbursement category is weighted twice that of other categories. Data from Steve Lisson,
editor of InsiderVC.com.
2 Operating experience counts VP level and above.
Disbursements.
Mr. Lisson gave a score of 10 to just one VC firm: Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers. Benchmark Capital, which has had some monster hits in the past couple
of years, scored a 7, because it has only been around for six years.
Longevity.
In the venture business, age counts for a lot. It means a firm has been battle-
tested and has done well enough to get its LPs to continue investing. We took
each firm’s number of years in business and divided that figure in half to come
up with a score (with a maximum score of 10). Six firms earned a 10. Two firms
came up short: Benchmark and North Bridge Venture Partners, with scores of
3 and 3.5, respectively.
Pressure to invest.
A general partner is better off if there isn’t pressure to put a lot of money to
work. We divided the amount of a firm’s current fund size by its number of
general partners, then assigned a value to the resulting figure. After talking to
several VCs, we determined that $90 million per partner was reasonable to
assign a score of 10. We gave a 9 to anyone managing $110 million, an 8 to
those managing $130 million, and so on.
VC experience.
This should be self-explanatory as to why it’s important. We gave general
partners with 15 years or more of experience a score of 10. Those with 12 to 14
years received a 9, and so forth. Oak Investment Partners came out on top in
this category, with an average of 17 years for its partners. Even though Kleiner
has at least three partners with more than 20 years of experience, its score got
knocked down to a 7 because it recently added some technology executives to
its partnership.
Operating experience.
With so many portfolio companies in trouble these days, every VC firm needs
partners who’ve been in the real world to advise troubled companies. We gave
each firm a point for any general partner with operating experience, plus a
bonus point for any partner who qualified as a “star.” General partners who fell
into the star category include Kleiner’s Ray Lane, former president and chief
operating officer (some say the de facto CEO) of Oracle, and Mayfield’s Janice
Roberts, who ran Palm when it was a division of 3Com.
Board seats.
Six boards is the maximum number you can sit on and still actually contribute
valuable time and energy, we’re told by veteran VCs. Menlo Ventures and
Matrix Partners were the only firms whose partners sat on an average of six or
fewer boards, giving them perfect 10s. We gave firms whose partners held an
average of seven to eight board seats a score of 9, and so on. Oak fared the
worst: its six general partners sit on an average of 12 boards each.
IPOs/Sales.
This is one of those categories that VCs like to brag about, but it can often be
misleading. Two firms may be in the same IPO, but one may own 15 percent of
a company while another owns 1 percent. The only real way to know how well a
VC did in an IPO is through disbursement figures. Still, we felt we should give
VCs some credit for liquidity events. We gave a firm one point for every $1
billion in value, with a maximum of 10 points for $10 billion. IPO figures were
based on the close on the first day of trading. Sale prices were based on the
value on the day the deal closed. A lot of moonshot IPOs have fallen back to
earth, so this category is squishy at best.
Lack of portfolio problems.
Matrix was the only firm on our list that had no failed or troubled companies.
We gave each firm 1 point for every failed company and half a point for every
company that had laid off employees in the past year. We then subtracted that
total from 10. Benchmark fared the worst in this category with a score of 4.
Blame it on those Internet bets like Living.com, MVP.com, and Send.com.
RH 100 factor (2000 and 2001).
VCs deserve credit for portfolio companies that show great promise. Because
the staff of Red Herring spent weeks vetting all of the companies that made the
Red Herring 100 list, we used the private portion of the list (50 companies) in
2000 and 2001 as a basis for determining potential hits. For every portfolio
company on the Red Herring 100, we gave a firm 2 points, with a maximum of
10. Kleiner and Accel Partners were the only firms to receive 10s for both years.
Kleiner had the most companies on this year’s list: Zaplet, Epoch, Synaptics,
SmartPipes, Asera, and Bowstreet.
As much time as we spent thinking about how to create a top ten VC list, and
then double- and triple-checking the data, we’d be nave if we didn’t expect
some VCs to take issue with our numbers or our methodology. So, don’t feel
shy about expressing your opinion.
Write to laragon@redherring.com.
Note: In the “Top 10 VC Firms” on page 185 of issue 97, Menlo Ventures
should have been ranked No. 8 and North Bridge Ventures should have been
No. 9. In addition, we did not make it clear that three firms tied for 4th place:
Sequoia Capital Partners, Oak Investment Partners, and Mayfield. The data
is correct here.
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Matrix Edges Kleiner
by Paul Shread
January 29, 2001–Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Matrix
Partners are considered the cream of the crop among venture capital
firms, the kind of VCs that limited partners are fortunate to be able to
invest their money with.
So compliments paid, we set out to find out which was better.
Using the data of Steve Lisson, editor of InsiderVC.com, who tracks VCs’
performance and considers Matrix and Kleiner the top VCs, we applied a
metric suggested by former Flatiron partner Dan Malven, which we will
call the “Malven Metric.”
Malven suggested the metric after our piece comparing Kleiner’s
performance in the IPO market last year with four other firms. In short,
we divide overall performance by the number of partners, thus measuring
wealth created per partner.
Malven cautions that that measure of performance could be skewed if each
partner at one firm has a lot more to invest than partners at another
firm, but Kleiner and Matrix appear pretty evenly matched. Matrix IV in
1995 was a $125 million fund (and had distributed 11 times that amount
to its limited partners by the middle of last year, according to
Lisson), and Matrix V in 1998 was a $200 million fund that had already
distributed four times its LPs’ capital by mid-2000. Using the
conservative figure of five partners during the time that 2000 IPOs were
being funded, that means Matrix partners had $65 million each to work
with. (We did not include Matrix VI, a $304 million fund that was only
30% invested as of June 30 last year.)
Kleiner VIII in 1996 was a $299 million fund that had returned 12 times
its LPs’ capital by mid-2000, according to Lisson. Kleiner IX in 1999
was a $460 million fund that was 80% invested by mid-2000. Using the
conservative figure of 13 partners, Kleiner partners had $58 million
each to work with.
Now on to the 2000 results. Ten of Kleiner’s companies went public in
2000 (0.77 IPO per partner), compared to 4 for Matrix (0.80 IPO per
partner). Kleiner’s stake in those companies was worth about $2.3
billion when the lock-up period expired (one company, Cosine
Communications, is still in lock-up, and Kleiner’s stake in the company
is worth about $100 million). Matrix’s stake in its four IPOs was worth
about $1.6 billion when they came out of lock-up. That gives Matrix a
per-partner return of $320 million, and Kleiner $177 million, giving the
edge in per-partner wealth creation to Matrix.
A few caveats on those results. First, we measured performance in the
IPO market only; we did not look at acquisitions, the number of which
often exceeds IPOs in a given year. Second, Kleiner has two health care
partners, according to Malven. Since health care companies had a tough
year in the IPO market last year (Kleiner had no health care IPOs),
reporting the results based on IT partners only raises Kleiner’s
per-partner wealth creation to $209 million. We certainly want our top
VCs to focus on the future of health care regardless of market
conditions, and there’s been quite a debate going on within the venture
capital industry about IT versus health care investing. The third caveat
is that Kleiner IX is the newest of the funds measured, so that too
could give Matrix an edge. But don’t feel too bad for Kleiner; according
to Lisson, 6-year-old Kleiner VII was the best-performing venture fund
last year, still riding high on its monster hit Juniper Networks
(NASDAQ:JNPR). That fund has returned more than 20 times its limited
partners’ capital.
Matrix’s big hit of 2000 was Arrowpoint Communications, which netted
Matrix $1 billion when it was acquired by Cisco (Nasdaq:CSCO) in June.
Kleiner had holdings in three IPOs that were worth $500 million or more
when they came out of lock up: ONI Systems (Nasdaq:ONIS), Handspring
(Nasdaq:HAND) and Corvis (Nasdaq:CORV).
It’s not clear when or if the VCs sold shares in the IPOs. Cisco’s
stock, for example, has declined almost 40% since the Arrowpoint deal
closed. Kleiner’s biggest winners have held their value since the
lock-up period expired, but both companies had holdings that declined
substantially from their lock-up expiration price.
Both firms also had about $2 billion each in 1999 IPOs that came out of
lock-up in 2000, giving Matrix the “Malven Metric” edge there too.
But as Lisson pointed out, “This is splitting hairs amidst the pinnacle
of the field. A fun, interesting and worthwhile analysis, but the
distinction makes no difference to investors in these funds. The amounts
of money involved are trivial when viewed in context, the venture
capital segment in the alternatives portion of an entire portfolio.
Nonetheless, the LPs of both Kleiner and Matrix can thank their lucky
stars to be in these funds. It is amazing how these and a few other
elite firms can put so much distance between themselves and the rest of
field, repeatedly, in bad times as well as good.”
And finally, a follow-up to last week’s column on Summit Partners, the
most recent firm to join the elite $2 billion fund club. Lisson had this
to say of Summit: “As a private equity investor, Summit can outperform
some early-stage VCs, the reverse of how it’s supposed to work. Now
that’s a firm where unquestionably ‘there’s something in the water’
consistently over the years.”
Corey Ostman of Alert-IPO and Mary Evelyn Arnold of VC Buzz provided research for this article.
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Sunday, November 24, 2013
VALLEY TALK
Behind the VC Music
FORTUNE
Wednesday, November 22, 2000
By Mark Gimein
Stephen Lisson is not a conventionally likable guy. On more
than one occasion, he’s implied that I’m the single stupidest
reporter he’s ever talked to. He has kept me on the phone for
hours at a time listening to the most arcane statistics, until I’ve
slammed down the phone in frustration. He calls people who
disagree with him “lickspittles.” He dismisses many of the
visitors to his Website as “parasites.”
And yet over the past few months I have repeatedly gone back to
Lisson and his new Website, InsiderVC.com, because Lisson has
the best data out there about venture capital, and often the most
interesting things to say about it.
Venture capitalists are the rock stars du jour of the financial
world, a species of money managers who are believed capable of
superhuman wisdom. Business magazines tend to assume that
the richer you are, the smarter you must be, and the Internet
boom has lavished untold riches on the venture capitalists who
invested early.
“Untold” is a key word here, because hardly anyone knows
exactly how great these riches are. In this way, venture-capital
funds are very different from, say, mutual funds. Venture
capitalists talk vaguely about “triple-digit returns,” but even
successful funds tend to keep their returns a closely guarded
secret. And even when they do reveal numbers, they can be hard
to understand.
This is where Austin, Texas, entrepreneur and venture-capital
gadfly Stephen Lisson comes in. Through years of research and,
apparently, a lot of cooperation from a network of sources
willing to send him copies of the reports that venture-capital
firms send out to their investors, Lisson has gathered an
immense database of information about venture-capital firms’
investments and profits.
Lisson doesn’t make all his data public–much of his information
is limited to subscribers, and he can be picky even about whom
he allows to subscribe. But what he’s already revealed in the
public sections (for example, see: Database Example) of
InsiderVC.com is fascinating. Some of his data shows exactly
what you might expect. Benchmark Capital Partners’ 1995 fund-the
fund that famously invested in eBay–has already returned to
its investors 38 times the money they put in. Investors who put
money into the fund that Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers,
Silicon Valley’s best-known venture-capital firm, raised in 1996,
have already made a similarly spectacular return of over 1,000%.
But you’ll also find that the 1997 fund raised by Hummer
Winblad, another venture-capital firm that has traditionally
received a lot of attention from the press, has so far returned
only 42% of its investors’ money. That might be a decent
showing in any other era, but in the middle of the biggest
technology boom or bubble in history, it’s not great, and not
nearly as good as some of Hummer Winblad’s peers. (Typically,
venture funds distribute cash or stocks as the companies in their
portfolio are sold or go public. In theory, that means they can
continue paying out money to investors for a very long time, but
in practice, almost all of their profits are made in the first six
years of the fund.)
Even more interesting are the data that Lisson has gathered on
how venture capitalists value their investments. Venture
capitalists measure their own performance by an “internal rate of
return”–an annualized rate of increase in the value of their
investments. Often that’ll be a number in the high double digits,
sometimes in the triple digits. Sounds pretty good when you
compare it with the typical mutual fund. But if you look at the
InsiderVC.com database, you’ll find that funds claiming
immense annual returns sometimes pay out a lot less money to
investors than you’d imagine.
As of March 2000, Benchmark claimed an annualized return of
an amazing 279% for Benchmark III, the fund that the firm
raised in 1998. But wait a second! Lisson’s data also show that
Benchmark III hadn’t actually distributed any cash or stock to its
investors. That 279% return was based on a guesstimate of the
value of the companies Benchmark has invested in–companies
that, since they hadn’t gone public, are notoriously hard to value.
One of those companies, Living.com, has already gone bankrupt,
reducing the value of Benchmark’s investment from an estimated
$74 million to zero. And it’s hard to believe that, with the Net
bubble bursting, Benchmark’s investment in eBags.com is really
worth the $20 million-plus that Benchmark valued it at in
March.
For individual investors who don’t have a prayer of putting their
money into funds that deal only with tech insiders, large
institutions, and foundations, analyzing exactly how much the
top funds make can certainly seem like an academic exercise. It
can all sound arcane, confusing, and dull, and if you are not an
investor in venture-capital funds, I don’t recommend it as a
hobby or a business. But it’s important that somebody do it.
First, because venture investment is the engine driving much of
Silicon Valley’s technological innovation. And, second, because
it’s important for somebody like Lisson to remind investors and
the business press that venture capitalists are not the gods of
finance they are often made out to be, but instead, very well-
trained money managers. Sometimes very smart money
managers, sometimes very lucky money managers, but
nonetheless, financiers who’ll often make a lot of money and
sometimes, like the rest of us, flub it.
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