| PE Week Wire - Friday, November 9 |
Valley Days, Moscow Nights
Russia celebrated the 90th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution earlier this week with marches in Moscow. But Silicon Valley saw a different type of revolution taking hold and celebrated in a decidedly different way.
Vladimir Vinokurov, Russia’s Consul General in San Francisco, hosted a bevy of high-profile financiers at his home in Pacific Heights to celebrate the final close of DFJ-VTB Aurora. Venture capitalists and statesmen drank Stolichnaya and sang “Moscow Nights.”
The $150 million fund is appropriately named. Just as its namesake cruiser, anchored at St. Petersburg, fired the first shot in the Bolshevik Revolution; the fund symbolizes Russia’s first shot at revolutionizing its economy toward technology entrepreneurship.
The fund, which has offices across Russia and in Silicon Valley, is the first recipient of money from the Russian Venture Company (RVC). The RVC is a public-private partnership backed by the Russian government. It started out as a fund-of-funds designed to stimulate technology startups through investing in venture capital as a minority limited partner.
This week, however, the government authorized an expansion of the RVC, doubling its monetary commitment to $1.25 billion. The government also tasked it to consider direct investments in startups and establish market development programs. The RVC has backed three firms so far and plans to solicit proposals again in February.
The increased RVC fund size dovetails with certain proposed regulatory changes approved Thursday for further government consideration. The changes are designed to emulate Regulation D in the U.S. and include provisions to protect intellectual property. Experts expect the changes to pass into law before the end of the year.
But Russian hearts must be swayed if the startup revolution is to be sustained. No single government program can remove the stigma of a failed business, or roll back generations of zero-sum thinking. Silicon Valley may have the one model that Russia is supremely positioned to execute: combine brilliant people with money and sprinkle marketing on top.
Taking the precepts of entrepreneurship from the intellectual to the actual requires courage, commitment and trust. Succeeding with startups calls for a character that must be cultivated; and no tree that bears fruit grows overnight.
-Alexander Haislip
(Daniel Primack will be back Monday.)
|
PAID ADVERTISEMENT |
See Full List of Current postings If you would like to be considered for any of these opportunities, click on the links above and the APPLY button on the job description. We will review your background in confidence and contact you
|
| |
SmartDrive Systems Inc., a San Diego-based provider of driver risk management systems and services, has secured nearly $43 million of a $46 million Series D round, according to a regulatory filing. New Enterprise Associates led the deal, and was joined by return backers Oak Investment Partners, Revolution Ventures, the Founders Fund and Western Technology Investments. www.smartdrive.net
ExaGrid Systems Inc., a provider of disk-based backup solutions with byte-level data de-duplication, raised $20 million in new VC funding. Lehman Brothers Venture Partners led the round, and was joined by return backers Highland Capital Partners and Sigma Partners. The company has now raised over $65 million in total VC funding since 2002.
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has lowered its ratings on wireless carrier Alltel Corp. to reflect an expected increase in the wireless carrier's leverage following its private equity buyout. The Little Rock, Ark.-based company is being acquired for $24.7 billion by TPG Capital and GS Capital Partners. Alltel's non-investment grade corporate credit rating was lowered to "B+" from "BB."
|
Join Us in San Francisco Only a few days left…
Register now for the Buyouts West Conference 2007 next Tuesday and Wednesday. While the buyout industry may be rooted in the East Coast, West Coast firms are developing a style all their own. Join the editors of Buyouts Magazine for a series of provocative panel discussions, insightful keynote speeches and great networking opportunities to help you sharpen your investment strategies and line up your next deal.
Keynotes from: Hartley Rogers (Hamilton Lane), Barry Schuler (DFJ Growth, former CEO of AOL), Alec Gores (Gores Group) Peter Nolan (Leonard Green).
Great Debates Part II: Kelvin Davis (TPG), John Adler (SEIU), Monte Brem (StepStone) and Dan Primack | |
Zilliant Inc., an Austin, Texas-based provider of price optimization and management software, raised $4 million in Series F funding, according to a regulatory filing. Liberty Mutual was joined by return backers Austin Ventures, Cardinal Venture Capital, Trellis Partners and JPMorgan Partners. The company has raised around $40 million in total VC funding since 1999. www.zilliant.com
DGP Labs Inc., a New York-based Internet startup, secured $4.75 million of a $5.25 million Series A round, according to a regulatory filing. Backers include Bessemer Venture Partners and General Catalyst Partners, with Rob Stavis of Bessemer and Hemant Taneja joining the DGP board of directors. No word yet on what the company actually does. www.dgplabs.com
CoreTrace Corp., an Austin, Texas-based IT security startup, raised $8.02 million in Series A funding, according to a regulatory filing. Backers include Venrock and Hunt Ventures. www.coretrace.com
Takkle Inc., a New York-based online social network for high school sports, has raised nearly $7 million in Series A-1 funding, according to a regulatory filing. Liberty Associated Partners was joined by return backers WMG Investments and Greycroft Partners. No word on whether this is completely new money, or just an add-on to a $5 million Series A round it raised last year. www.takkle.com
JoMaJa Inc., a San Francisco-based online marketplace, has raised $3.2 million in Series A funding led by Catamount Ventures, according to a regulatory filing. The company is founded by three former executives of StepUp Commerce, which was acquired by Intuit. One of them, Adam Jackson, has a LinkedIn profile that indicates the company will focus on the automotive space.
BreakingPoint Systems Inc., an Austin, Texas-based developer of network test equipment, has raised $15 million in Series C funding, according to a regulatory filing. Backers include Austin Ventures and Genesis Inventions LP. www.bpointsys.com
Fluxion Biosciences Inc., developer of microfluidic systems for single-cell analysis, has raised $6.85 million in Series B funding, according to a regulatory filing. Backers include Kodiak Venture Partners, Claremont Creek Ventures and Life Science Angel Investors. www.fluxionbio.com
|
Only 47 Shopping Days Left... Nothing makes a better stocking stuffer than a Premium Membership to peHUB.com. It lets you search through all past issues of the PE Week Wire, plus everything ever posted on peHUB.
It costs just $124 for a one-year membership. So what are you waiting for? Sign up today. | | |
|











Interested in placing your ad above? Learn How
|