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From: | "P Maiden" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 23 Oct 2000 07:39:42 +1300 |
A really good article for those interested
in venture capitalists.
Obviously some people make a lot of money on the way through
but at the end of the day most of the ventures cost investors
dearly.
We all hope that ITC and EVC and the like are more
cautious.
The higher the risk the bigger the rewards - but how many of
the real winners does the man in the street actually get a share.
A bit of a teaser to the contents. "For those companies, IPO mania has returned. Corvis, for instance, a three-year-old fiber-optic equipment maker, went public in July with absolutely no revenues and is valued at $20 billion, netting a combined $3.5 billion for Kleiner Perkins and NEA. Oplinks and ONI Systems went public with $30 million and $16 million in lifetime revenues, respectively--and millions in losses--and are worth $5 billion and $7 billion. The VCs smiling from those deals? Kleiner Perkins (which made $820 million), Mohr Davidow Ventures (almost $900 million), and Crescendo ($1.2 billion). It's starting to feel like the dot-com era all over again. "There's the same presumption that all optical deals will be successful," says Hoag. In six months, according to Venture One, 124 optical networking companies have been funded" Peter
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