The Deal
Sunday, November 8, 
6:52 am

IBF VC conference 2007: June 2007

IBF VC Conference: Going Global

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Globalization and private equity are the inescapable recurring themes here at the IBF annual venture investing conference.

And it didn't take long for New Enterprise Associates' graybeard Dick Kramlich to note that in the first quarter of this year, the trend in the vast amount of private capital raised was that for the first time, more money was raised outside the U.S. than in.

Declaring flatly that London is clearly now the financial capital of the world, Kramlich said that attention has shifted away from venture capital and technology.

But while he managed to get a gentle dig in, he performed a deft twist in logic to present the current balance of power as a positive for the venture industry.

"PE is where the real action is, and it truly is amazing, I just hope there are enough inefficient companies," he said. "I don't like to see excesses, but bring back the bubble."

Kramlich declared that venture capital has become "quaint," and not in a bad way. Acknowledging that NEA's "NewVC" program of putting more resources into late stage deals is going after the same opportunities PE players are pursuing, he nevertheless said VCs can succeed quietly by doing what they have always done in fostering innovation while PE firms chase deals based on leverage and inefficiencies.

This is simple stuff," he said. "We don't need to get headlines, just keep doing what we do, creating new jobs and new technology." - Clifford Carlsen

Continue Reading




IBF VC Conference: Heesen and Doll

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
When National Venture Capital Association president Mark Heesen and next year’s chairman elect Dixon Doll both talked about possible public policy challenges facing the industry due to the changing political climate, each urged active participation by VCs in promoting industry interests in areas such as immigration, corporate governance and tax policy. Both encouraged education of policy makers on the history of venture capital in promoting job growth and economic expansion, and warned of the dangers of the industry being lumped into new regulation and disincentives aimed at private equity firms and hedge funds. To their credit, each claimed confidently that...

Continue Reading




IBF's VC conference kickoff

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Outsourcing and strategies beyond outsourcing were the hot topics as conferees at the International Business Forum's 18th annual Venture Capital convened in a pre-conference session Wednesday afternoon on Investing in Asia: China, India, Vietnam & Beyond. Moderator Haemmig, a lecturer at Stanford and U.C. Berkeley who said he spends about six months a year studying and consulting in emerging markets, laid the framework for a discussion that at times seemed to stray from traditional venture investing issues. While most deals are classified as early stage, he cited statistics that showed 23% of such deals in China are in profitable companies,...

Continue Reading





Browse other Categories
Main Index
Decade of The Deal
Crisis Dashboard
Crisis On Wall Street

Search



Editor's Choice


    Syndicate

    Recent Entries

    Video


    Linklaters' Schmidt on Pfizer-Wyeth review

    Linklaters' Schmidt says how regulators handled Pfizer Inc.'s acquisition of Wyeth is an outlier of how others merger reviews will be conducted.

    Categories

    Monthly Archives

    Blog Roll

    footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg


    ©Copyright 2009, The Deal, LLC. All rights reserved. Please send all technical questions, comments or concerns to the Webmaster.