Archive for December, 2006

The Texas Growth Company Search Tool

Sunday, December 31st, 2006

jr nov 06   Happy New Year! (almost)

COMING SOON:  loaded into the Southwest Venture “Texas Growth” search bar will be a targeted search capability for Texas-focused VC and PE firms and the companies they back.

Using the tool, readers can find Texas-backed portfolio companies, fund information, team members, and the like.

I hope it will be a useful tool for conducting primary research on funding trends and capital availability, and for general poking around.  If you have a suggestion for additional sites to be added to the database, leave a comment and we’ll add it.

This tool is being developed by Irving, Texas-based Multiview, which produces vertical online guides for trade associations, and has developed this targeted search capability as a part of its vertical client offerings.

Best wishes for a happy and productive 2007!

-JR 

The One Percent Solution

Monday, December 18th, 2006

jr nov 06     According to Rutberg & Co., in November 2006 a total of 32 privately held wireless companies announced over $680 million in new financings.  99% went to companies outside of Texas, notwithstanding the relative strength of the area in telecom and wireless. 

The single Texas company on the November list is Dallas-based RipCode, led by Brendon Mills.  Interestingly, the deal was co-led by Vesbridge (Jeff Hinck - Boston), Eldorado (Scott Irwin - Sand Hill road), and Hunt Ventures (Jeff Williams - Dallas).  It’s an example of how Texas deals can/should be done, with a local VC leveraging a managing director with deep local experience, and with investor support and exposure on both coasts.  It’s the relative market share of Texas deals nationally that stands out in the Rutberg study.

 Obviously this 1% result is just a snapshot of Texas deal activity in a particular sector, but it is not out of line with recent VC funding activity in other tech sectors. 

 

-John Reed

Scoping the Texas Investment Opportunity

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

jr nov 06  This morning, Eric Tom forwarded an email article on the VC market in Texas.  In summary, the lack of growth capital in Texas has gotten the attention of the State Government, which is not always a bad thing. 

From today’s “PE Week Wire”: 

An Odd Proposal 

Later this week, the Teacher Retirement System of Texas will take up a gubernatorial request that it allocate up to $600 million for direct venture capital investments into Texas-based companies and related technology endeavors. It is an odd proposal, to be sure, but not necessarily one to be dismissed out of hand.  

TRS currently makes all of its venture capital investments as a limited partner in unaffiliated venture capital funds, as do most public pension systems. For example, its upcoming alternative assets committee meeting will consider fund commitments to both Leonard Green & Associates and Providence Equity Partners. Also like most public pensions, TRS buttresses a fairly meager alternatives staff with third-party consultants (

Hamilton Lane

, in this case). As of August 2005, approximately 3.3% of the $93.32 billion system was invested in alternatives.  

But this new proposal from Gov. Perry is an attempt to shake up the TRS model, in order to promote local economic growth. Specifically, Perry is concerned that the local venture capital community has all but dissipated in the post-bubble years, and that the result is an unfair disadvantage for Texas-based startups. And he’s right.  

Texas receives the third-most venture capital of any state, but this year will receive less than 25% from in-state investors. Compare that to #2 Massachusetts with over 36% from in-state. Sure outsiders are coming in, but it’s always difficult to attract VCs from outside the 50-mile radius. The result often is that entrepreneurs are either trying to bootstrap themselves or picking up and moving to the Coasts. 

The problem - investment capital in Texas - is being recognized.  And as long as the root of the problem is access to capital and not deal supply, the answers are easier.  The infrastructure for deal/opportunity creation is complex and takes generations to create.  The supply of capital to match those opportunities should be simpler and more quickly (and productively) responsive to large initiatives like these.  

  

-John Reed 

Flat Earth and Venture Capital

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

 

JR 2006   In the summer of 2006, as my company was closing out a financing round, I began studying the current process of raising capital for Texas growth companies.  (My background over the last 15 years or so has been as a co-founder/CEO involved in raising over $200M for three startups and related ventures.)

The deeper I looked, the more it became evident that the Texas growth capital market has been in flux and was still moving.  Access to capital for growth companies in Texas is in a state of real, structural change:

  • Texas VC’s in general are not raising the ‘next’ fund, for a variety of reasons, although the opposite seems true on both coasts
  • Private Equity continues to gain fundraising momentum, in some cases competitively with VC’s - especially for larger deals
  • The traditional exit scenario is still messy
  • One thesis is that changes in the VC market are analogous extension of what happened in Texas with commercial banking in the 80’s and in investment banking in the 90’s, where local institutions were sold/merged and became outposts rather than centers.  Most of the traditional Texas names in investment banking - Rotan Mosle, Eppler Guerin, Rauscher Pierce, Schneider Bernet, etc. eventually morphed from having complete capabilites - Institutional Sales,  Retail, Research, Investment Banking - to being limited “Flat Earth” outposts funneling business back to the money centers.

I’d argue that Flat Earth benefits for growth capital are not total, and in fact these developments create a new class of Texas-based investment opportunity.  These posts are about defining new classes of growth company opportunity and raising capital against them.

 

-John J. Reed