tiistai 30. kesäkuuta 2009

Aikaisempia blogitekstejä

Vuoden 2009 alussa perustettu Forsalin Blog Live Your Dream List on suositeltava blogi seurattavaksi. Tietty ryhmä kirjoittaa vuorotellen kerran viikossa havaintojaan elämän eri osa-alueilta.

Aikaisemmat kirjoitukseni kyseisellä foorumilla löytyvät oheisista linkeistä:

http://forsal.blogspot.com/2009/06/kymmenen-kiteytysta.html

http://forsal.blogspot.com/2009/04/mita-missa-milloin.html

http://forsal.blogspot.com/2009/02/elama-excelissa.html

Venture Capital For A 5th Grader

HEC Paris Private Equity and Venture Capital Blogista löytyi mielenkiintoinen lapsille suunnattu presentaatio Venture Capitalista.

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

Venture Capital in Europe 2009 Q1 Statistics

Here are some statistics of Venture Capital in Europe in Q1 2009 I picked up from HEC Paris PE/VC Blog:

"Europe saw 170 deals garner $1.18 billion (€906 million) in the first quarter, down 35% from the €1.40 billion that went into 281 deals during the same period in 2008. This marks the lowest deal count for Europe since VentureSource began reporting on the region in 2000. However, it’s important to note that the 35% decline is comparatively better than how other parts of the world faired in Q1 VC investment (the U.S., China and Israel saw drops of 50%, 58%, and 75% respectively). Europe now accounts for 21% of worldwide venture investment.

Europe’s information technology (IT) industry is being hit the hardest during the current downturn. IT saw €277 million invested in 82 deals in Q1, down 44% from the €492 million put into 129 such deals last year and the industry’s worst quarter on record. Within IT, the information services sector fared better than most as it accounted for 46% of all IT investment in the quarter with €127 million and 28 deals, which is down 16% from the year-ago period but on par with investment levels the sector has seen over the last two years.

Investment in the European health care industry outpaced that of IT in the first quarter as venture capitalists put €311 million into 42 health care deals. Even so, this marks a 39% decline from the first quarter of 2008 when there were 70 deals worth €513 million. And for the first time since 2005, Europe’s venture investment in the energy and utilities industry outpaced that of the U.S. and was the only area to see investment actually increase, up 82% to €221 million in 10 deals from €122 million in 18 deals a year ago. This growth was due to a large round raised by NorSun of Oslo, Norway, which landed €147 million in first-round financing.

In France, investors put €117 million in 43 deals, down 41% from €198 million in 53 deals a year ago. In the UK, venture investment fell 58% from €562 million invested in 98 deals last year to €234 million in 50 deals during the most recent quarter. This marks the country’s lowest deal count on record.

Also, while average deal size fell in every other part of the world it actually went up in Europe (much of this is influenced by the NorSun deal and the bigger piece of the pie that energy investments took) with the median size of a venture capital deal ticking up over 8% to €3 million from €2.8 million.

Davenport: Private Equity and the Ownership Decision

Tom Davenport kirjoittaa Harvard Business Blogissa kriittisesti Private Equitystä. Davenport kritisoi erityisesti Private Equity-yhtiöiden runsasta velankäyttöä, mikä on talouden taantumassa ajanut useita niiden omistamia yrityksiä vaikeuksiin.

http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/davenport/2009/06/private_equity_and_the_owernsh.html

Poimintoja Davenportilta:

"Private equity is in shambles now, and deservedly so. Deals are down 96% from their peak. The "industry" has run several pretty good companies into the ground, including Mervyn's, Linens 'n Things, Steve & Barry's, Station Casinos, and 66 of 105 bankruptcies in 2009"

"Which would you rather have; owners who load your company with debt and take away your water, or owners who give you gyms, on-site subsidized childcare, and a piano player at lunch? Granted, not all private owner/operators will act like Jim Goodnight, but it's hard to imagine private equity owners investing for the long haul and to keep employees productive and happy. Think about this decision before you sell your company to a PE firm — or work for one that's already been sold."
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