Quick Headlines: M&A, Possible IPO and Venture Capital

A few quick headlines on a Thursday afternoon:

  • Just a few days after VMWare completed its acquisition of Zimbra, the Silicon Valley technology darling announced its intention to acquire certain assets from EMC.  The deal focuses on software products and expertise from EMC's Ionix IT management business in an all-cash transaction valued at up to $200 million.   Ben Verghese, Chief Management Architect, Virtualization and Cloud Platforms Business Unit, gave a bit of insight into the transaction on his executive blog.  VMWare is certainly keeping my former colleague and current Sr. VP and General Counsel Dawn Smith busy these days.
  • Deutsche Telekom didn't rule out spinning out T-Mobile USA and taking it public later this year, though the global telecom giant did rule out trying to gain market share buy acquiring one of its competitors in a "multi-billion-euro" deal anytime in the next two years, according to a BusinessWeek article today.  An IPO of that magnitude could certainly serve as a nice shot of adrenaline for the still-stalled US IPO market.

 

CollabNet Extends Market Leadership with Acquisition of Danube Technologies

CollabNet, the leader in Agile application lifecycle management, announced today that it has acquired Danube Technologies, the worldwide leader in Scrum project management solutions. Danube offers the industry-leading ScrumWorks Pro software for Agile project and program management and provides training, certification, coaching, and consulting services to organizations implementing Agile. The Danube acquisition uniquely positions CollabNet as a leader in the emerging Agile ALM market. CollabNet and Danube assist more software development teams with collaborative, distributed, and Agile ALM projects than any other company in the world. The terms of the deal are confidential.  Reed Smith's Silicon Valley office advised CollabNet in the acquisition.  I was the lead partner on the deal (yes, a shameless bit of self promotion; I know).

Are Secondary Private Offerings and Facilitators like Second Market Changing the IPO Game?

Over the last few months, three technology darlings, Facebook, Zynga and Yelp, have closed deals with venture capital funds that included both an investment in new shares and also the acquisition of existing shares from employees and other major stockholders.  The secondary piece of those deals is somewhat unique because it gives those employees or stockholders the opportunity to liquidate some or all of their equity positions without the company filing for its initial public offering.  Illiquid securities sales facilitators like SecondMarket are also providing the opportunity for early liquidity by matching equity holders in venture-backed companies with willing buyers outside of the public markets.

The question, of course, is whether this new trend in venture capital investing or the emergence of SecondMarket is going to radically change the IPO market.

If by radically change, we are talking about reducing the numbers of offerings by elite technology companies, I'm not sure that anything can really move the needle significantly compared to the last two years when technology IPOs were about as common as Bigfoot sightings.  The fact remains, though, that employees often choose to join hot venture-backed companies and take annual base salaries below the current market in exchange for the dream of a quick infusion of cash thanks to an IPO or acquisition.  The market meltdown in late 2008 has dramatically affected the personal finances of those individuals, who are now forced to hold on to what has traditionally been illiquid stock for far longer than they would like.  The lack of exits certainly has hurt venture-backed companies attracting rock-star employees.  But the emergence of secondary pieces to late stage venture capital investments and facilitators like SecondMarket helps solve that problem.  It also dramatically reduces the pressure on a company's board of directors to take a company public.

As a result, I think that hot technology companies will now wait until there is a compelling reason to begin the IPO process.  IPOs have always been expensive transactions to consummate, both from a dilution standpoint and also in terms of legal and accounting fees.  But the maintenance fees for public companies weren't that big of a deal, until Sarbanes Oxley came along and completely changed the game on operating as a public company from a cost perspective.  And that change certainly wasn't to the benefit of companies, though the protections add a good layer of protection for stockholders of listed companies.  Thus, companies haven't been rushing to the IPO gates like in the pre-SOX days, and the emergence of the new liquidation avenues discussed above will only slow that race even more.

Nevertheless, I don't think that either secondary pieces to venture investments or illiquid securities sales facilitators will completely derail the need for companies to go public.  Indeed, both VCs and facilitators need robust exits for their strategies to continue to work, which is why these liquidity strategies aren't implemented in very young companies, opting instead to work with startups that have been around for several years and look like excellent IPO or acquisition candidates.  If anything, I think that the market for exits will be more robust, maybe not in terms of numbers of deals but in terms of quality of deals, as a result of these new liquidity strategies.

Entrepreneur DNA

I came across a very interesting blog post on Both Sides of the Table while browsing the blogosphere last night -- yes, Silicon Valley corporate lawyers have time to browse the web and read the occasional blog; don't listen to claims to the contrary.  The blog is written by a two-time entrepreneur who now sits on the other side of the funding table as a venture capitalist.  The post describes what the author believes are the 12 attributes that makes an entrepreneur, and each enumerated attribute leads to a separate post on that focuses on that individual attribute.  It is a well-written, interesting blog post with great information for entrepreneurs.

The one thing that I think the author should add to the list is the ability to do the most with the least.  From my perspective dealing with entrepreneurs on a daily basis and spending more than two years as the founder and CEO of an Internet startup, that is a crucial attribute for just about any entrepreneur.

Raising money is tough in any environment.  In the current economic climate, it is next to impossible for first-time entrepreneurs with little more than a business plan.  That means entrepreneurs are forced to actually develop the some part of the technology and often have some sort of customer validation before they will get funded.  That is a far cry from the golden days of the late 90s when entrepreneurs had to do little other than add DOT.COM to their corporate name and start a website to have the funding spigot busted wide open.  We can sit around and sulk about the good old days all we want, but the reality is that the game has changed, whether permanently or temporarily.  Today's entrepreneurs really need to know how to stretch the dollar.  They need to know how to build a company on less than a shoestring budget.  In other words, they need to find a way to take modest sums of friends and family money and accomplish more than entrepreneurs of the previous two decades did with their first round of outside investment.

Entrepreneurs who can do the most with the least stand a far better chance of succeeding, in my opinion, than those who require large initial cash infusions--unless, of course, the entrepreneur is either flush with cash or has close friends who are flush with cash.

Reed Smith Represents BNY Mellon in $2.31 Billion Acquisition

Longtime Reed Smith client Bank of New York Mellon recently announced its pending acquisition of the global investment servicing business from PNC Financial Services Group for $2.31 billion in cash.  The deal makes BNY Mellon the second-largest provider of fund accounting, administration and transfer agency services.  The deal is expected to close in the third quarter.  We advised BNY Mellon in the deal and Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz advised PNC.

 

Green Plug Closes Series B Round

Green Plug, the first developer of digital technology enabling collaboration between electronic devices and their power sources, recently announced that it has closed its Series B financing.  The investor syndicate included Herald Investments UK, Killik & Co. and Peninsula Venture Partners. Reed Smith advised Green Plug in the round of financing.

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