Archive for February, 2008

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EchoStar (NASDAQ: DISH) closed at $28.64. Smith Barney says, “three ‘anti-M&A’ events have removed any take-out premium - Tax-free spin SATS, insider selling, and DISH participation in 700MHZ auction have removed M&A premium from DISH shares. We still think M&A is possible.”

DISH January option implied volatility of 43 is near its 26-week average according to Track Data, suggesting non-directional price risk.

M&A Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com.

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Facebook held up Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) for $240 million in funding, then tapped Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing for another $60 million. Now, it has turned to three German entrepreneurs for more money, according to TechCrunch. The Samwer brothers, Alexander, Marc and Oliver, have reportedly invested in Facebook, though terms of the investment are unknown.

What’s known is that the Samwer brothers are filthy rich after selling German auction site Alando.de AG to eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY) in 1999 for $43 million, wireless ringtone and mobile games maker Jamba AG to VeriSign (NASDAQ: VRSN) in 2004 for $273 million and Germany’s answer to Facebook, StudiVZ, in 2006 for $100 million to Holtzbrinck LLC (now Macmillan Publishers).

Continue reading at TechConfidential.com.

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Wednesday, when I checked my mail box, I had to throw most of the stuff away. Essentially, the task is really about weeding out lots of junk mail.

Well, Earth Class Mail thinks it has a better way. In fact, the company raised $13.3 million this week from investors including Ignition Partners and the Keiretsu Forum.

Basically, the service allows for on the web delivery of regular postal mail - for consumers and businesses. Yes, it’s a cool “clicks and bricks” business model, and I think it could see lots of traction (I would like to use the service, actually).

Earth Class Mail has assembled an impressive team, with operators from Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX). Even though, I think that Kenn Dahl, who is a board member, will be key. After all, he is the president of Prime Recognition, which develops sophisticated optical character recognition software.

Interestingly enough, there is also a cleantech angle. That’s, Earth Class Mail will recycle your mail.

And, based on the mail I get, I think I could save a few trees.

Finally, if you want to check out other interesting venture capital deals, check out DealProfiles.com.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Edgar Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements.

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New healthcare investment fund Sant

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Despite plenty of turmoil in the stock market, 2007 will go down as a pretty solid one for venture-backed companies that found their way to the public markets or were bought out.

According to the fourth quarter Exit Poll done by Thomson Financial and the National Venture Capital Association, 31 venture-backed companies went public in the fourth quarter, the most since the third quarter of 2000, raising $3 billion. For the year, 86 venture-backed companies went public, raising $10.3 billion, a 51% increase in volume over 2006, when 57 companies went public, and more than doubling the $5.1 billion those companies raised.

However, only 45 venture-backed companies were acquired in the fourth quarter, the lowest number of M&A exits since the first quarter of 1998, when there were 44 M&A exits. For the year, though, there were 304 venture-backed M&A transactions with a total disclosed value of $23.7 billion, the highest disclosed value since 2000.

Continue reading at TechConfidential.com.

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Glassbooth Facebook App

Glassbooth, the presidential election voting aid we previously covered, has released a Facebook application so that you can put their helpful quiz on your Facebook profile (between your “Hot or Not” and “Which Friends character are you?” apps).

After you take the quiz via the application, results showing your top three candidates are displayed on your Facebook profile. Your friends can click the candidates to see why you agreed with them (based on degree of similarity on specific issues).

Your friends can also add the application to their profiles and take the quiz to show for whom Glassbooth suggests that they vote.

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I love when experts declare the obvious. Talking about the glut of private equity debt that investment banks are now looking to push onto investors, John Eydenberg, head of leveraged finance for the Americas at Deutsche Bank AG in New York, told Bloomberg that “the market can absorb all these deals. It is a question of time and price”.

Well, duh. But isn’t that kind of like saying that a store will be able to unload all those ugly, out of style clothes — it’s just a matter of time and price? Given an infinite amount of time and a willingness to sell at any price, pretty much anything can be sold!

And that’s the situation with private equity right now. Investment banks which must place billions of bonds to finance buyouts are having trouble finding buyers in the midst of the credit crunch. Banks are frequently offering investors bonds at a 5-10% discount to face value.

The difficulty banks are having in placing debt — and the extra yield investors are demanding — should prolong the slowdown in buyouts. And if investors aren’t eager to purchase the bonds, investment banks won’t be eager to finance buyouts.

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BusinessWeek reports that The Bear Stearns Companies (NYSE: BSC), which reported earnings today, is behind $10 billion worth of Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) at Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC). It all comes down to yet another new word to add to your financial vocabulary — Klio Funding — a brand of CDO that enabled Bear to sell to the $2 trillion money market fund industry.

What is Klio Funding and how did it cause all this damage? Klio Funding is “an entity” that sells Commercial Paper (CP) — short-term loans — and uses it to purchase higher-yielding long term investments. Since Citigroup had agreed to refund investors’ initial stakes plus interest — through liquidity puts — money market funds that purchased Klios thought they would get higher yields at low risk.

Meanwhile, Ralph Cioffi — who headed up three Bear hedge funds which eventually folded — used money raised from the Klios to purchase CDOs and to lock in year-long financing for his hedge funds. This is significant because hedge funds typically can only borrow money for weeks at a time due to their risk. Cioffi’s CDOs were popular, raising $100 billion.

The Klio structure turned out to be a pyramid scheme according to Yale University economist Robert J. Shiller. As new investors arrive to the celebration, they bid up prices, boosting returns for those who got in earlier. The huge gains attract more investors, and the cycle continues — as long as the players don’t try to take out their money en masse.

That’s exactly what happened this spring. Cioffi tried to sell more CDOs to raise money to prop up the hedge funds he managed. But just after raising $4 billion in Might, his hedge funds imploded, wiping out $1.6 billion of investors’ money. In November, Citigroup and Bank of America wrote down some $10 billion in CDOs thanks to their liquidity puts. The financial system faces at least $500 billion in write-downs — creating a large capital hole that needs to be filled.

The lesson for investors is clear. If you hear lots of new vocabulary words coming out of Wall Street, someone is making big amounts of money in the short-term that’ll eventually blow up, leaving others to pay the costs. If you’ve invested in something with a name you don’t comprehend, find out what it is. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

We already know that James Cayne, Bear’s CEO, is paying the price by not getting a bonus. The question is whether he’ll be able to keep his job.

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He owns Citigroup shares and has no financial interest in the other securities mentioned.

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Traackr

Traackr is a free web service that lets you aggregate data about your media presence on the Web. Just create an account, add your “subscriptions” (flickr username, last.fm username, etc.), and wait about 24 hours for Traackr to get statistics.

Each day Traackr will get information like number of views, comments, and ratings, with trend graphs to make the data pretty. It will also show you which of your tags get the most views (helpful for getting user attention). You can also create campaigns to track how well certain media objects are “performing” which could be very useful for a photographer to see how popular certain groups of photos are.

Traackr could be a great tool for musicians, photographers, videographers, and the ego-centric social-site user. It’s a central location to see how popular you (or your work) are, and it gives you seemingly arbitrary “Buzz” and “Populartity” scores.

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Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) spinoff GainSpan Corp. landed $20 million in a second round of venture capital to move into volume production of extremely low power WiFi chips the company recently launched in the fast-growing industrial sensor market.

Opus Capital of Menlo Park, Calif., led the deal, which includes previous investors Intel Capital of Santa Clara, Calif., New Venture Partners of Murray Hill, N.J., OVP Venture Partners of Portland, Ore., and Sigma Partners of Menlo Park, which initially invested $1.5 million to spin the company out of Intel in September 2006.

The new investment is positioned to fully fund the company to positive cash flow as it expands marketing of chipsets and software for a wide range of commercial and industrial applications.

Continue reading at TechConfidential.com.

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