Home » December, 2011 Entries posted on “December, 2011”

Private equity deals

Macquarie Infrastructure Partners has agreed to acquire WCA Waste Corp. (Nasdaq: WCAA), a Houston-based provider of collection and disposal of non-hazardous solid waste. The deal is valued at around $526 million in cash, or $6.50 per WCA share (32% premium to yesterday’s closing price). Selling shareholders include Ares Managementwww.wcaa.com

Celestial Tiger Entertainment
 has been formed as an independent media company focused on branded pay TV channels, content creation and distribution across Asia. No financial terms of the startup investment were disclosed, but investors are Celestial Pictures Ltd., Saban Capital Group and Lionsgate.

ConceptONE LLC, a New York-based financial technology and advisory firm, has raised an undisclosed of minority funding from Philadelphia-based private equity firm Lauren Capital Partners.www.conceptonellc.com

Sterling Partners has invested an undisclosed amount in First Choice Emergency Room, a provider of 12 freestanding emergency rooms in Texas. www.fcer.com

Whitcraft Group, a portfolio company of Linsalata Capital Partners, has acquired Dell Manufacturing Co., a Connecticut-based manufacturer of precision components for the aerospace market. No financial terms were disclosed. www.dellmfg.com

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Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

December 23 2011 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Venture capital deals

Cyber-Ark Software, a Newton, Mass.-based information security provider, has raised $40 million in funding co-led by Goldman Sachs and Jerusalem Venture Partners. Some of the deal includes the repurchase of shares from existing backers. www.cyber-ark.com

Jawbone, a San Francisco-based mobile headset maker, has raised $40 million in new VC funding. Backers include Deutsche Telekom, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Yuri Milner and existing shareholder J.P. Morgan Asset Management. The company previously raised around $170 million from JPAM, Andreessen Horowitz, Khosla Ventures and Sequoia Capital. www.jawbone.com

Boston-Power Inc., a developer of lithium-ion batteries, has raised $30 million in new private equity funding. GSR Ventures led the round, and was joined by fellow return backers Oak Investment Partners and Foundation Asset Management. The company is headquartered in Westborough, Mass., but recently agreed to shift its locus of operations to China, as part of an earlier $125 million funding round that included investment from Chinese government entities.  www.boston-power.com

Tactus Technology Inc., a Fremont, Calif.-based developer of touch interface components, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Thomvest Ventures. www.tactustechnology.com

SurDoc Corp., a Menlo Park, Calif.-based provider of document processing and backup technology, has raised $4 million in new funding from IDG Ventures. www.surdoc.com

Cloudability, a Portland, Ore.-based platform for managing cloud expenses, has raised $1.1 million in seed funding co-led by Trinity Ventures and WaldenVC. www.cloudability.com

Reliance Industries of India has acquired a minority position in TerraPower, a Bellevue, Wash.-based developer of nuclear technologies. No financial terms were disclosed. TerraPower shareholders include Bill Gates, Charles River Ventures and Khosla Ventures. www.terrapower.com

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Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

December 23 2011 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Pre-Marketing: Hostess troubles

* David Talbot: The comeback of Xerox PARC

* Poor Twinkie: Hostess close to filing for bankruptcy (again)?

* Kelly Phillips Erb: 5 things I wish I knew before losing my job

* Morning Call: U.S. futures point higher, London rises early, European shares climb and the Nikkei falls.

* Inevitable: Hospital nurses vs. Cerberus

* Gordon Orr: Everyone loses in a China-U.S. trade war

* Derek Thompson: The most important graphs of 2011

* Moody’s: UK credit rating not immune to Euro crisis

* Alexis Madrigal: Why are Christmas websites so weird?

* Matt Levine: What we talk about when we talk about bank capital

* Get Term Sheet: Sign up for our daily email on deals & deal-makers

* Geraldine Fabrikant: The “art” of Steve Rattner’s comeback

* His name is Mudd: Fortress CEO and ex-Fannie Mae boss takes leave of absence

* Tweet of the Day: @shaver The only good thing about SOPA is that rickrolling would finally get a punishment commensurate with the severity of the crime.

Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

December 23 2011 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Retiring NYSE DMMs Daniel O’Donnell and Stephen Steinthal ring the NYSE Closing Bell

December 22 2011 | Posted in NYSE | Read More »

FedEx rings the NYSE Opening Bell

December 22 2011 | Posted in NYSE | Read More »

American Truck Group Brings Christmas to Gulfport!

December 22 2011 | Posted in Company News | Read More »

Telltale Games’ Law & Order: Legacies Available Now!

December 22 2011 | Posted in Company News | Read More »

OptiMedica Receives FDA Market Clearance of the Catalys™ Precision Laser System

December 22 2011 | Posted in Company News | Read More »

OptiMedica Receives FDA Market Clearance of the Catalys™ Precision Laser System

December 22 2011 | Posted in Company News | Read More »

Oracle: Warning of another tech slowdown?

The enterprise giant’s stumble may not bode well for the technology sector — and not just enterprise providers, but all big cap tech companies.

By Kevin Kelleher, contributor

larry_ellisonFORTUNE – Oracle missing its earnings guidance is like Mariano Rivera blowing a save opportunity, or Bob Dylan putting out a disappointing record. It happens, but not very often. And when it does, the only real question is: Why?

The answer matters beyond the world of Oracle (ORCL) shareholders. Oracle has long been seen as a kind of proxy for corporate spending on information technology. If Oracle’s earnings disappointed because of internal problems, that’s not such a big deal outside Oracle. If Oracle didn’t do much wrong, however, it points to a possible slowdown in IT spending for next year.

So what happened? The enterprise software giant weighed in earlier this week with revenue of $8.8 billion in the three months ended Nov. 30, up 2% from the same period a year earlier but short of the $9.2 billion analysts were expecting. Similarly, non-GAAP earnings per share came in at 54 cents, below the 57 cents the Street had been looking for.

Oracle hasn’t fallen short of estimates for at least three years — a feat all the more significant given the weak economy. As of Tuesday’s close, before the company posted its earnings, Oracle had gained 64% over the past three years, against a 40% rise in the S&P 500.

On Tuesday, the stock tumbled 12%. In the past six weeks, the stock has lost nearly a quarter of its value, equal to roughly $40 billion. The S&P 500 is down only 2% in the period. And other software stocks are being dragged down in Oracle’s wake: Salesforce.com (CRM) fell 5%, SAP (SAP) dropped 6% and VMWare (VMW) slid 10%.

Even as the financial turmoil in Europe and overheated economies in Asia have raised concerns about another global recession in 2012, the tech world has seemed somewhat immune. Most of the discussion focused on the consumer side of the industry — the ongoing rivalry between Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG), the rise of Amazon’s (AMZN) tablet, the fate of Zynga’s (ZNGA) IPO. The enterprise side is much less visible and — frankly — a little unglamorous, but just as important as the consumer side.

And if companies are putting the brakes on IT spending, it could hurt tech stocks across the board. The relative resilience of Oracle’s stock and its ability to consistently trump the Street’s estimates gave the company an aura of safety. Here was a tech giant that could weather hard times. And if Oracle is feeling a chill in IT spending, what are other software vendors feeling?

The conventional wisdom is that enterprise software can help companies reduce some long-term operating costs in departments such as human resources and customer relations. Cloud computing, an area that Oracle has been pushing into, can also reduce IT costs by handing over storage and maintenance functions to companies that can run vast networks that benefit from economies of scale.

So if companies are growing stingier about their enterprise software budgets, it could signal they are starting to cut closer to the bone. Oracle CFO Safra Catz said that it’s taking some of its clients longer to approve projects. “All of a sudden the CEO had to approve it or something like that, where before it was all set,” Catz said. Though, she stressed that she hadn’t been told yet that any companies were reducing their IT budgets. “Clearly, this quarter was not as we thought it would be, and we’ve been taking a look at the deals that really should have closed and that would have closed but for sort of irregular environment.”

On the one hand, it’s unrealistic to expect a company like Oracle to offer investors an economic forecast. On the other, it’s hard to read a phrase like “some sort of irregular environment” and wonder what exactly it means. Is it a one-time quirk in Oracle’s accounting? An aberration that will be corrected next quarter? Or is it something more serious?

The notion that Oracle’s irregular environment was limited to last quarter was undermined when the company offered guidance. The company said the current quarter’s revenue would grow between 1% and 5% on year, or between $8.9 billion and $9.3 billion — below the consensus of analysts for $9.5 billion — while earnings per share would be between 56 cents and 59 cents, against the Street’s 59 cents.

That left some analysts worried enough that three of them — Societe Generale, Canaccord Genuity and CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets — cut their ratings on the stock Wednesday. But Canaccord felt that Oracle’s challenges were unique to the company. “Oracle missed because some buyers waited for a new hardware upgrade, and on the software front the firm is behind the curve in cloud applications,” wrote analyst Richard Davis. “We expect Oracle to catch up, but it will be through some R&D and a lot of M&A.”

But other analysts suggested Oracle may be the canary in an unhealthy coal mine. Bank of America’s Kash Rangan wondered if the tighter approval process Catz mentioned ” could be a broader trend for software.” Deutsche Bank’s Tom Ernst said he “saw uncharacteristic weakness across all segments and geographies, which we find a bit puzzling… Outside of the severely contracting macro environment of the last recession, it is rare to see such low growth rates for all geographic regions.”

So which is it? Has Oracle hit a speed bump as it transitions to new hardware and cloud computing offerings? Or is it the first warning sign of an unexpected contraction in corporate IT spending in the face of global economic uncertainty? The easy answer is, it’s likely a little of both.

Other companies will offer more clues. On Wednesday, Tibco (TIBX), a cloud computing company, said it earned 42 cents a share last quarter, above the Street’s 35-cent estimate. But the real test will come in mid-January when companies like SAP and IBM (IBM), another strong performer in tech over the past three years, are due report its earnings.

If it turns out Oracle was the exception, this week’s drop in software shares could prove to be a buying opportunity for bulls. But if Oracle is the first sign of a slowdown, the tech world could be in for a rough start in 2012.

Filed under: Big Tech, Contributors

December 22 2011 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »