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Larry Summers goes geek

Obama’s former economic adviser has a new job in Silicon Valley.

Larry Summers was president of Harvard University when Mark Zuckerberg packed up for the West Coast. Now it seems that Summers, who most recently served as director of the White House National Economic Council, also has a similar itch.

Summers has signed on as a senior adviser with Andreessen Horowitz, the venture capital firm whose portfolio includes Internet superstars like Facebook, Groupon, Twitter and Zynga. It’s a part-time role with long-term incentives tied to investment performance, in which Summers will be expected to advise both the firm and portfolio companies on various economic trends. He may also sit on certain portfolio company boards.

“We wanted to add someone to the team with deep experience thinking about global markets, because all of our companies want to be global,” says firm co-founder Marc Andreessen. “All of our companies also are trying to transform markets, which is something Larry knows a lot about.”

Andreessen and Summers first met this past January, though an introduction by Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg. Andreessen is a Facebook director, while Summers hired Sandberg as his chief of staff when serving as U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Clinton.

“She told us that we needed to meet each other, and we both do what Sheryl says,” Andreessen explains. “So we got to talking and learned that Larry was interested in doing a set of things around tech, and one of those was wanting to work with a VC firm.”

Summers will have an exclusive VC firm relationship with Andreessen Horowitz, meaning he will not work with any other venture shop. He is free, however, to advise tech start-ups that have received investment elsewhere. For example, he recently joined the board of mobile payment startup Square, which is not an Andreessen Horowitz portfolio company. Summers also may consult other types of financial institutions on macroeconomic trends.

“I think information technology is the economic story of our time,” Summers says. “People will remember this as the moment of IT revolution, long after they forget about the details of Lehman or AIG or the financial disruption. As an economist, it’s exciting to learn more about that and contribute to it.”

Summers declined to definitively answer whether or not the IT market is in the midst of a bubble, saying that today’s market has different characteristics than the 1990s dotcom boom, but that “whenever people get too happy it’s a good idea to maintain one’s suspicions.”


Filed under: Term Sheet

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Game off? No Zynga IPO filing today

Zynga Inc., the San Francisco-based social gaming giant whose titles include FarmVille, was widely expected to file for its IPO today. In fact, some poor saps like me rearranged their entire schedules around it.

But Reuters now says that the S-1 won’t actually come until tomorrow morning. No explanation for the minor delay, although my best guess is that it’s a paperwork issue. Greece-related turmoil might postpone an actual IPO pricing, but not an IPO filing.

Earlier reports suggest that the San Francisco-based company will aim to raise between $1.5 billion and $2 billion at an implied valuation of between $15 billion and $20 billion. The desired valuation, however, is unlikely to be noted in initial regulatory filings. Instead, that usually comes in amended filings once an offering price-range has been determined.

Zynga has raised over $500 million in VC funding, from firms like Foundry Group, Union Square Ventures, Kleiner Perkins, Avalon Ventures, Institutional Venture Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, Tiger Global, Digital Sky Technolgoies, Softbank and Google.

While we wait, it’s worth noting that another Kleiner Perkins portfolio company did file to go public today: Luca Technologies, a Golden, Colo.-based company focused on gasification of in-ground coal, shale and oil reserves. It is looking to raise $125 million, with UBS, Citi and Piper Jaffray serving as co-lead underwriters. In addition to Kleiner Perkins, investors include One Equity Partners, Oxford Biosciences and BASF Venture Capital.


Filed under: Term Sheet

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