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Andreessen Horowitz bags $1.5 billion

Andreessen Horowitz raises a whopping $1.5 billion.

Andreessen Horowitz is a Silicon Valley venture capital firm. Unlike most other Silicon Valley venture capital firms, however, Andreessen Horowitz doesn’t struggle to raise new funds. Instead, institutional investors virtually beg for the privilege of participating.

It can’t be long until other VCs film a series of video spots talking about how “I wanna be like Marc.”

Today the Menlo Park-based firm announced that it has closed its third fund with $1.5 billion in capital commitments. That includes a $900 million general fund and a $600 million parallel fund, with management fees required on both (last time around, Andreessen Horowitz only charged management fees on the general fund).

For context, the average American venture fundraise last year netted just $107 million.

It’s also a big jump in size for Andreessen Horowitz, which raised a total of $950 million for its first two funds combined. Marc Andreessen says that part of the increase is to allow for a longer investment period of two-to-three years, rather than the 13 months or so that it took to invest Fund II.

Beyond that, no major investment strategy changes are on tap. The firm still plans to focus on early-stage and growth equity tech investments inside the U.S., with the possibility of participating in larger transactions like the 2009 carve-out of Skype from eBay Inc. (EBAY). It also is pulling back a bit on later-stage “pre-IPO” rounds, but could revisit the area if macro economic conditions cause mutual funds to retreat.

Andreessen also pushed back a bit against his firm’s reputation for overpaying — a knock that comes from both competitors and even some of his own limited partners.

“We were heavily criticized for overpaying for Skype, and then we did deals like Facebook and Twitter and Gorupon and Zynga and even Jawbone,” Andreessen says. “But there were strategic reasons to invest in those companies, and some people got confused between valuation and strategy. Since July, though, we haven’t participated in anything you’d probably characterize as having a very high valuation. We even have a slide showing 40 impressive names we passed on last year, half due to valuation. I think it’s largely a lagging reputation.”

One Andreessen Horowitz limited partner tells me that the firm’s fundraising success is largely predicated on its extraordinary access. “They don’t yet have the returns of an Accel or a Sequoia, but they are in the same sorts of deals,” he says. “It’s just a matter of time.”

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Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

M&A

ThyssenKrupp has agreed to sell its stainless steel business to Outokumpu of Finland for €2.7 billion.www.ThyssenKrupp.com

AngioDynamics (Nasdaq: ANGO) has agreed to acquire Navilyst Medical, a Marlborough, Mass.-based provider of medical devices for vascular access, from Avista Capital Partners for $372 million in stock.www.angiodynamics.com

Emerging Capital Partners has sold its 24.9% stake in Batim Africa, an Ivory Coast-based land development and housing construction company, to Moroccan insurance company Saham Group. No pricing terms were disclosed. www.ecpinvestments.com

IBM (NYSE: IBM) has agreed to acquire Worklight, an Israel-based provider of mobile software for smartphones and tablets. No financial terms were disclosed. Worklight had raised over $17 million in VC funding from firms like Genesis Partners, Index Ventures and Pitango Venture Capital. www.ibm.com

ICV Partners has sold Entertainment Cruises Inc., a Chicago-based dining cruise operator, to an undisclosed “private, long-term investor.” No financial terms were disclosed. www.icvcapital.com

Woolworths, an Australian supermarket company, is seeking to sell its Dick Smith electronics chain, according to Reuters. The deal could be worth around A$190 million.

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Filed under: Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Private equity deals

Bain Capital has completed its $487 million acquisition of Physio-Control, a Redmond, Wash.–based provider of emergency medical response technology, from Medtronic Inc. (NYSE: MDT).  Citigroup and RBC provided leveraged financing, while Medtronic was advised on the deal by Goldman Sachs.www.physio-control.com

CVC Capital Partners is in exclusive talks to buy Swedish construction equipment company Ahlsell fromCinven and GS Capital Partners, according to Reuters. The deal could be worth more than $2 billion.

Talbot’s (NYSE: TLB) has opened its books to Sycamore Partners, just one month after rejecting the private equity firm’s $212 million takeover offer.

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Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Venture capital deals

Solera Networks, a Salt Lake City-based provider of network security analytics, has raised $20 million in Series D funding. Intel Capital led the round, and was joined by return backers Allegis Capital, Signal Peak Ventures and Trident Capital. www.soleranetworks.com

Sumo Logic, a Mountain View, Calif.-based log management and analytics service, has raised $15 million in Series B funding. Sutter Hill Ventures led the round, and was joined by Greylock Partners and angel investor Shlomo Kramer. www.sumologic.com

AlienVault, a Campbell, Calif.-based provider of an open-source security information and event management solutions, has raised $8 million in Series B funding. Trident Capital led the round, and was joined by return backers Adara Venture Partners and Neotec. www.alienvault.com

Relume Technologies, an Oxford, Mich.-based maker of LED products and smart grid control systems for outdoor lighting applications, has raised $7 million in Series D funding. Beringea led the round with a $3.2 million investment, and was joined by Western Technology Investment and undisclosed return backers. www.relume.com

SnagFilms, a Washington, D.C.-based, has raised $7 million in new equity and debt financing. Terry Semel and David Fialkow were joined on the equity tranche by return backers Comcast Interactive Capital, New Enterprise Associates, Case Foundation Ventures and Ted Leonsis. The venture debt was provided by Silicon Valley Bank. www.snagfilms.com

Clio
, a provider of cloud-based management tools for the legal industry, has raised $6 million in Series B funding. Acton Capital Partners led the round, and was joined by Point Nine Capital. www.goclio.com

Cambrios Technologies, a Sunnyvale, Calif.-based developer of nanotech-based solutions for developing electronic devices with transparent conductors, has raised $5 million in fourth-round funding from Samsung Venture Investment. www.cambrios.com

SeaWell Networks Inc., a Toronto-based maker of multi-platform video delivery software for network operators, has raised C$5 million in Series B funding. Northwater Capital Management led the round, and was joined by BDC Venture Capital. www.seawellnetworks.com

NowForce, an Israel-based provider of cloud-based command and control solutions, has raised $4 million in VC funding co-led by by Indigo Strategic Partners and Winnovation. www.nowforce.com

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Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Pre-Marketing: America’s good bank

* David Rohde: Meet America’s good bank

* Niall Ferguson: Oops. Paul Krugman was right

* Josh Brown: Wall Street’s Jean Valjean problem

* Bust: Mark Cuban’s sports-betting hedge fund idea collapses

* Yves Smith: ProPublica’s off-base charges about Freddie Mac

* Morning Call: U.S. futures point higher, London rises earlyEuropean shares climb and the Nikkei closes flat.

* Buh-bye: Three founders are out at Demand Media

* Vladimir Putin: Russia needs more tech, less corruption

* Stalling: House group seeks delay in PE registration deadline

* Never back smug: A lesson for life sciences from Newt Gingrich

* Rana Foroohar: Are companies more powerful than countries?

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

* Tweet of the Day: @dshen: with the facebook IPO this week, i predict a huge wave of angel funding approximately 6 months from now

* Tweet of the Day II: Hobokenhomefind #Corzine condo for sale at Maxwell in #Hoboken. Heading over to look for missing $1.2billion in the sofa cushions.

Filed under: Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Ethanol’s food-fuel dilemma

Demand for corn ethanol is raising food prices. What’s needed is a policy change.

A bulldozer readies corn grain for delivery in Burlington, Iowa.

A bulldozer readies corn grain for delivery in Burlington, Iowa.

FORTUNE — After 30 years of government largesse that would have made even Nancy Pelosi blush, Congress in December let expire the roughly $6 billion annual subsidy for corn ethanol. That’s bad news for the big refiners that were paid 45¢ for each gallon of corn ethanol they blended into gasoline supplies. But it’s good news for those worried about the “food-fuel dilemma” when the demand for corn to make ethanol has been raising the price of some foods.

Not so fast. It turns out that while the subsidies are gone, U.S. law still requires oil refiners to blend corn ethanol into fuel — some 12.5 billion gallons this year and at least 15 billion gallons by 2015. That’s still a small portion compared with the 133 billion gallons of gasoline that the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates Americans will burn this year, but nonetheless enough to keep upward pressure on corn prices. That law needs to change, argues Jeremy Grantham — who oversees nearly $100 billion at his Boston investment firm, is known for calling both the dotcom and housing bubbles and is an environmentalist to boot. “It [U.S. ethanol policy] is truly diabolical,” he says. “The subsidy was decoration. The mandate is the villain here.”

4 new ways to solve the energy challenge

Those mandates have been working all too well. Over the last decade the U.S. jumped past Brazil to become the world’s top ethanol producer. Some 40% of the U.S. corn crop, the world’s largest, is now used for fuel and byproducts. The irony is that a study done at Princeton suggests that corn ethanol does little to reduce greenhouse gas compared with gasoline. It has helped the U.S. reduce its dependence on foreign oil, but with new sources of domestic oil coming online, the role of corn ethanol in achieving national energy security will become less significant.

Those aren’t the only reasons Grantham, 73, gets upset. How can we even consider using a food crop like corn, he argues, for fuel? He has calculated that ethanol demand increases the global price of a bushel of corn by 20%. “It inflicts unnecessary pain on anyone who eats,” Grantham laments. “And one day people will starve because of it.” Not surprisingly, the agriculture lobby disagrees with Grantham’s assessment, contending that the price increase is minimal.

There is hope. A next-generation ethanol called cellulosic, made from nonfood feedstocks such as switchgrass and wood chips, could solve the problem, says Grantham. He advocates scrapping the mandate for corn-based ethanol while leaving one in place that favors cellulosics. Dozens of companies have struggled mightily for years to produce this kind of ethanol affordably and at scale. (Grantham himself has invested in one, New Hampshire-based startup Mascoma.) The question is whether the technology will arrive soon enough to make a difference in world hunger.

This article is from the February 6, 2012 issue of Fortune.

Filed under: Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Dividend stocks: Buyer beware

With bonds, CDs, and money markets offering paltry payouts, it’s no wonder investors are looking for better returns. They just need to know what they’re getting into.

FORTUNE — There’s one group of people who aren’t cheering Ben Bernanke’s announcement last week that the Federal Reserve expects to keep interest rates ultra-low through 2014: people of modest means who live off their interest income.

As I’ve been pointing out since 2007, the Fed has eviscerated the income of prudent savers in its attempt to repair the economic damage caused by imprudent borrowers and lenders. I believe that the Fed, whose job is to protect the financial system and promote employment, is acting in the best interests of the country at large. But what’s helping the overall economy is hurting savers.

The people with the biggest problem are those who saved all their lives and are now supplementing their Social Security retirement checks with interest income. With that income cut sharply — five-year Treasuries yield less than 1%, and yields on certificates of deposit are microscopic — these people have three options, all of them unpleasant: reducing their standard of living as their income drops; eating into their principal; or taking on more risk in order to generate more income.

Risk has become a popular option, which helps explain why dividend-paying stocks are in vogue. Last year, the dividend-paying stocks in the Standard & Poor’s 500 returned 5.3% more than non-dividend payers, according to Aronson Johnson Ortiz, a Philadelphia money management firm. That’s a sharp reversal from 2010 and 2009, when non-dividend payers outperformed by 1.6% and 35.6%, respectively.

10 best stocks for 2012

Part of the reason for last year’s outperformance, I’m sure, comes from lots of money, including a chunk of mine, being plowed into dividend-paying stocks because bonds and CDs yield so little, and you need an electron microscope to find the yield on money market mutual funds (my main money fund’s current yield: a whopping 0.01%).

Recommending dividend stocks has become the conventional investment wisdom, and understandably so. However, if you’re joining the dividend-seeking hordes, you need to realize that you’re taking a much bigger risk than owning CDs or bonds.

CDs are guaranteed by the federal government. Bondholders are first in line to get paid, and ultimately get their principal back if the issuer doesn’t default. But a dividend-paying stock is a whole other story.

Common shareholders are the last in line to get paid, not the first. As many bank stockholders discovered to their sorrow when the financial crisis struck, dividends can be cut sharply or even eliminated if a company runs into trouble, or needs to conserve capital.

In addition to income risk, stockholders have price risk, too. They have no guarantee of getting back the price they paid for the stock. If a stock’s annual dividend is, say, 3% of its market price the day you buy it, a hiccup or two can wipe out several years of interest income.

“While a dividend-paying stock can feel like a bond, at some point market volatility will slap you with a painful reminder that it’s not,” says Stefani Cranston of Aronson Johnson Ortiz. “And, if 2011 was any indication, one thing you can count on is market volatility.”

The bottom line: If you go the dividend route, which is what I’ve done because I’m 67 and may not be employed full-time forever, make sure you understand what you’re getting into. Make sure you can afford the losses if you pick some wrong stocks or wrong mutual funds, which even the most astute investor does occasionally. Yes, a 3% dividend yield is vastly more attractive than a 1% interest yield. But remember that the added income comes with greater risk. It’s the one economic rule that never changes: There’s no such thing as a free lunch.

Filed under: Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

The cash is coming! Here’s how to play it.

If company executives can’t figure out how to invest their money back into their own businesses, they’re going to have to return it to their shareholders. This year may finally be the year for that.

FORTUNE — When Apple announced its latest quarterly earnings last week, the most amazing thing wasn’t that it once again blew away Wall Street’s expectations. This company is on a roll of unprecedented proportions, and it’s almost assumed that it will exceed expectations — the only question is by how much. What was far more profound was the revelation of the hoard of $97.6 billion in cash and marketable securities on the company’s books. We’ve been reading for a few years now about corporate America’s growing pile of idle balance sheet cash, but this is something else entirely. Apple shareholders don’t really have much to complain about these days — the stock is up 424% over the past five years, compared to a 7.4% decline in the S&P500. But come on, Cupertino. If you can’t think of ways to use the money, give it back to its rightful owners. You’re not a hedge fund.

Apple (AAPL), mind you, is not alone in its seeming inability to put the cash it has generated of late to work. According to a January 24 report from Goldman Sachs (GS), non-financial companies the investment bank follows have seen gross cash balances rise by 55% over the past four years, and the ratio of total cash to enterprise value rise from 6% to 10%. Much of that sits in overseas accounts as companies patiently hope for a day when Congress agrees to pass a tax holiday on foreign income. (Good luck with that.)

But here’s the good news: Goldman thinks a more “shareholder friendly” moment is upon us, and that corporate executives are finally going to start doling out the money pile they’ve been sitting on due to their abject fear of investing in an uncertain economic climate. Companies they follow seem ready to direct a whopping 37% of their cash to dividends and share buybacks alone in the coming year, roughly 500 basis points higher than the average from 2002 to 2010.

All of this means there’s some good money to be made if you know how to pick your spots.

Stock buybacks. In 2011, some $530 billion of buybacks were authorized by corporate boards, 45% higher than in 2010, and a five-fold increase from the 2009 low. While Goldman admits that buybacks are not always a reliable indicator of stock outperformance, since March 2009, stocks with new repurchase agreements have outperformed the S&P around the announcement of the buybacks. And we’re not talking about small numbers, either: In 2011, Walt Disney (DIS) announced a $16 billion buyback, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) a $15 billion one, and Wal-Mart (WMT) another $15 billion. Goldman identifies a handful of companies they think might soon announce or expand repurchase programs, including eBay (EBAY), Pfizer (PFE), and Qualcomm (QCOM). They add another list of companies with big chunks of buybacks yet to be completed, including Viacom (VIA), Saks (SKS), Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF), and IAC/InterActive Corp (IACI).

Here’s my favorite list, though. They compiled a list of companies for which you might consider selling put options because a buyback looks likely to support the company’s shares. You pocket the price of the option, and provided the stock doesn’t fall and is “put” back to you, you walk away at the option’s expiry with a few bucks for pretty much doing nothing at all. No guarantees here, folks, but this is as close to a free lunch as you can get, barring some disastrous news out of a company or a collapse in the overall stock market. A few candidates: Cablevision, Halliburton, and American Eagle Outfitters.

Of course, disasters can—and do—happen. Netflix (NFLX) famously spent over $1 billion on share repurchases when its stock was flying high, leaving the company in a jam last fall that necessitated a dilutive financing at $70 a share because it had nearly run out of cash. Even in more benign circumstances, there’s no guarantee that a buyback will offer any share price support in a volatile market. To its credit, Goldman points out that the long-term effect of buybacks on stock prices is mixed at best.

Dividends. While Goldman’s research doesn’t point to a similar surge in dividends, its analysts do see a steady level of cash being returned to shareholders by such a route—some 14% of capital allocations in 2011—equal to the average from 2002 to 2010, and above the 12% levels of 2006 to 2008, when companies still thought they had better uses for their cash than just giving it back to shareholders. And here’s the thing: fixed income investments remain at pathetic yields these days — 2.04% for 10-year Treasuries or a paltry 0.11% for one-year notes. Find yourself a nice dividend-paying stock, and you’re ahead of the game already. Goldman identifies a number of companies with both attractive yields plus historical dividend growth. They include Pfizer (again!), General Electric, Coca-Cola, and Boeing. Some higher-yielding stocks that might be a bit riskier include Och-Ziff Capital Management (a 10.7% yield!), Verizon (5.2%), and Duke Energy (4.7%).

Mergers and acquisitions. The pace of cash acquisitions seems to be picking up as well. According to Capital IQ, a number of major U.S. companies opened their wallets for major M&A moves over the last 12 months, including MGM Resorts ($407 million in cash spent), Liberty Interactive ($185 million), Allscripts Healthcare ($121.5 million) and Ford Motor Company ($94 million). Not every CEO is trigger-shy, in other words, and there is big money out there waiting to be put to use.

And what of actual corporate investment—now known by its trendy political moniker, “job creation?” Fewer than half of executives polled recently by Fortune said they expect to increase their headcount in 2012. Companies allocated 38% of their cash use on capital expenditures in 2011, which is still below the long-term average of 39% and even below 2009 levels of 42%. A September 2011 study by McKinsey & Company pointed out that while large numbers of executives felt their companies were underinvesting in their business, a rise in loss aversion—weighing potential losses significantly more than equivalent gains—has taken hold across all manner of industries. In other words, they’re suffering from an inability to make bold decisions. So they might as well start giving it back to shareholders.

So the news is positive, if only on the margins. And it seems as if the long night of cash hoarding might finally be coming to a close. If companies can’t figure out how to invest their money or spend it on M&A, they’re going to give it back to their shareholders. Now someone just needs to let the people at Apple know that in this one rare instance, they are not better or different than everyone around them. It’s not their money—it’s their shareholders’. If they’ve got no use for it, give it back.

Filed under: Term Sheet

January 31 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

NGL Energy Partners rings the NYSE Opening Bell

January 31 2012 | Posted in NYSE | Read More »

Presentatie Amsterdam City Index gevierd met gongslag

January 31 2012 | Posted in NYSE | Read More »