Home » Finance Blog You are browsing entries filed in “Finance Blog”

Facebook lays out IPO details

Facebook takes its next step toward its IPO.

FORTUNE — Facebook is planning to go public at a valuation of between $60 billion and $75 billion, according to an amended IPO registration statement filed this afternoon. If all outstanding stock options were exercised — plus a few other machinations — the company’s market cap could rise as high as $98 billion.

The Palo Alto, Calif.-based social network plans to offer over 337 million Class A shares at between $28 and $35 per share. It’s an unusually wide range for such a filing, with most prospective issuers usually only using a $3 spread (e.g., $28-$30).

Facebook will formally launch its roadshow next week, with Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs serving as co-lead underwriters. The company’s “e-roadshow” is available here.

It plans to trade on the NASDAQ under ticker symbol FB, with the actual pricing expected to come later this month.

The company also today said that 180 million of the offered shares would come from the company itself, while the remainder will come from insiders. Here’s a list of who plans to unload part of their stakes:

  • Accel Partners: 35.9 million shares, which would leave it with around 153 million shares
  • DST Group: 26.25 million shares being offered, left with around 105 million shares
  • Goldman Sachs: 13.19 million  sharesbeing offered, left with around 53 million shares
  • Elevation Partners: 4.6 million shares being offered, left with around 36 million shares
  • Meritech Capital Partners: 7 million shares being offered, left with around 33 million shares
  • Mirosoft: Offering 6.56 million shares, left with around 26.23 million shares
  • Reid Hoffman: 942k shares, left with just over 3.77 million shares
  • Mark Pincus: Around 1 million shares, left with just over 4.3 million shares
  • Greylock Partners: 7 million shares, left with around 30 million
  • Tiger Global Management: 6.56 million shares, left with around 50 million shares
  • Jim Breyer (individual, not via Accel): 2.31 million shares, left with around 9 million shares

T. Rowe Price and Andreessen Horowitz are the only significant institutional holders not planning to offer any shares, holding onto all 18 million. Other notable “holders” include Sean Parker (66 million) and Dustin Moskovitz (134 million) — although both would sell millions of shares as part of the underwriter’s “green shoe” option, if exercised. It also appears that Parker sold more than 3 million shares via private placement within the past 5 weeks — termed a “transfer” — but details are not specified.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg plans to sell around 30.2 million shares, which he says will be used to settle tax obligations.

It’s also worth noting that the IPO range has an impact on how much Facebook really paid for mobile photo-sharing company Instagram, which it agreed to acquire last month. When announced, the deal was said to be for $1 billion. That includes $300 million or cash, and 23 million shares of Facebook stock. If Facebook prices at the low end of its range, that brings the acquisition price to $944 million. At the high end, $1.1 billion.

Sign up for Dan’s daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: GetTermSheet.com

Filed under: Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

The 3 biggest benefits of producing more oil

The economic argument for a major expansion in drilling is alive and well, contrary to what President Obama says.

FORTUNE — The outrage over a top EPA official’s statement that he aimed to “crucify” oil producers perceived as violating the agency’s rules has revived a debate crucial to America’s future.

President Obama argues that a campaign to substantially raise domestic crude oil production would provide miniscule benefits in lower prices and enhanced growth. With gasoline at over $4 a gallon in some places, and turmoil in the Middle East igniting fears that a big squeeze could strike at any time, it’s important to examine whether the economic argument for a major expansion in drilling is really as weak as the administration claims.

In fact, tapping the potential gusher within reach would enrich our future in three ways. First, despite the President’s declarations to the contrary, the extra output could be large enough to lower world prices by several dollars a barrel, chiefly through exploiting the enormous promise of shale oil. Second, adding to capacity would provide a sort of catastrophic insurance policy by cushioning shocks in supply that are especially damaging in the kind of tight, vulnerable market we’re experiencing today. And third, raising production means lowering our oil imports, and hence greatly improving our balance of trade. By pure GDP math, shrinking “net imports” would lift America’s growth trajectory.

How we got here

To appreciate the advantages of prizing the oil patch, it’s crucial to understand how global oil prices are established. In normal times, the world price equals the cost of the last, most expensive barrel that consumers are willing to buy. Times are anything but normal. Right now, that barrel is probably being produced from Canadian tar sands at between $70 and $80. So why is the prevailing price around $105? The reason is that worldwide excess production capacity is extremely tight.

MORE: 5 ways to transform Greece’s economy now

“I estimate that extra capacity is only around half-a-million barrels a day,” says David Kreutzer, an economist at the Heritage Foundation. “That’s about the same level we saw when prices spiked in 2008.”

Tight capacity means that almost all wells are pumping full tilt. To bring on more oil, producers that could react quickly may choose not to. A country like Saudi Arabia would need to spend lots of money uncapping old wells, and upgrading old fields, investments it’s now unwilling to make, in part from fears these high prices are temporary.

That leaves oil-hungry consumers to bid for the fixed number of barrels entering the market each day. In effect, someone commuting by car in London outbids a Chicago driver for scarce gasoline, and the Chicago driver saves by taking the train. That bidding is now driving the price far above the cost for the producer drilling the world’s most expensive oil, creating what’s called in economics a “scarcity premium.” And it’s why Exxon Mobil (XOM) and other oil giants are generating such huge profits.

How did the market reach this bind? From 2003 to 2008, demand for oil rose sharply, driven primarily by rapid industrialization in China and India. “The oil rich nations matched the rise in demand by producing more until around 2006,” says Lutz Kilian, professor of economics at the University of Michigan. “Then, production went flat, and even when demand started increasing again after the recovery began, production didn’t keep up.”

MORE: Paul Ryan: Republicans need a real agenda

Among the reasons were the shrinkage in production in the Gulf of Mexico following the British Petroleum (BP) disaster, and the hostility of big players such as Russia, Venezuela and Mexico towards private oil companies, leaving those nations to rely on inefficient domestic producers. “It became difficult for big oil companies to find places to invest where they didn’t have to fear they’d be expropriated,” says Kilian.

The U.S. is loaded with oil reserves that can be produced far below both the current world price of $105 as well as what would be the world price in a normal market, between $70 and $80. Any extra oil the U.S. produces, then, must lower the world price. The question, as we’ll see, is by how much. If the U.S. pumps lots of new supplies at $35 to $40, the cost of shale oil, total world demand could be satisfied without the priciest oil sands production at $80. All the new oil might even make the “most expensive barrel to clear the market” crude that scooped from the Gulf of Mexico at $55.

Or, if demand keeps rising, the extra U.S. production could help total world output keep pace. That could hold prices at, say, the $70 or $80 level, whereas they might rise far higher in the absence of a surge in U.S. supplies.

More oil, lower prices

So how much new oil must the U.S. must produce to substantially lower the world price? A lot. By Kreutzer’s reckoning, an additional 1% increase in world output lowers the global price by between 2% and 3%. Today, the U.S. makes produces 6 million barrels a day of crude. So what would happen if the U.S. were able to produce an additional 2 million barrels a day? That’s 2.3% of world supply, so that prices –– all other things being equal –– would fall between 4.6% and 6.9%. We’re talking about a decline of between $4.70 to $7.10 a barrel, based on today’s prices.

MORE: 5 budget assumptions that won’t happen

But is an increase on that scale conceivable? Today, shale oil flowing from such booming fields as Bakken in North Dakota, Eagle Ford in Texas and Marcellus in Pennsylvania are pumping around 400,000 barrels per day. According to a study by energy consulting firm Purvin & Gertz, that number could rise to 1.3 million barrels by 2020. Reaching the 2 million mark would require a shift in regulatory policy in favor of far more drilling.

For example, the administration has rescinded drilling permits for the Chukchi Sea in Alaska and left the Atlantic and Pacific coasts off-limits to production under the Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program. Those two areas boast reserves equivalent to almost 40 billion barrels. Getting an extra 1 million or more barrels a day from domestic sources is indeed feasible: Since 2007, crude production has already jumped about 1 million barrels per day, or 20%. History tells us that high prices eventually create new production, and new discoveries, on a scale that confounds practically all the forecasts.

Right now, the looming danger is that prices will soar far above today’s already elevated levels. A perilous scenario is poised to play out, either soon or in future versions. Since capacity is extremely tight, any sudden surge in buying will enormously inflate prices. It doesn’t have to be a sudden shutdown in supply, triggered by a war in the Middle East.

“On the contrary,” says Kreutzer, “the big danger is that customers will that fear oil supplies will be cut off, so they start storing big volumes of oil to protect themselves. All that buying causes an explosion in prices well before any big event happens.”

MORE: Stocks only look cheap

In that case, even a relatively small jump in demand could cause a sharp spike in prices––once again, because capacity is so tight. But the reverse is also true: A relatively small amount of new capacity could provide a crucial shock absorber. The solution is to encourage the producers to sink more wells and open new fields, and the best candidate is the U.S. “Even the addition of 500,000 barrels of extra capacity in 2008 would have prevented the price from spiking nearly so much,” says Kreutzer.

Hence, measures that help raise output in the U.S. are a crucial safeguard against the threat we’re facing today, a volatile mix of a market stretched to the limit, and the daily reports of turmoil in the most oil-rich regions on the planet. The rhetoric is dizzying, but the economics are clear: More drilling makes sense for America.

Filed under: Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Facebook sets IPO price?

Facebook may have set an IPO range

FORTUNE — Facebook is planning to set its IPO price range at “high-$20s to mid-$30s per share,” according to The Wall Street Journal.

The report adds that such a range would give the company a valuation of between $85 billion and $95 billion, although that doesn’t seem quite right. Unless Facebook has significantly changed its number of shares outstanding, anything in the “high $20s” would put  the company’s valuation well below $80 billion.

For example, Facebook priced its shares at $30.34 a piece upon agreeing to acquire Instagram, which worked out to a valuation of approximately $75 billion.

Chances are this will get straightened out in a couple hours, since word is that Facebook will be filing an amended registration statement at market close.

The company’s IPO roadshow, with Mark Zuckerberg in tow, is expected to begin next week with the shares expected to price later this month.

Update: Facebook has officially set its terms. Details here.

Sign up for Dan’s daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: GetTermSheet.com

Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Carlyle shares rise slightly post-IPO

Private equity firm begins trading on the NASDAQ.

FORTUNE — The Carlyle Group (CG) saw its shares rise slightly in early trading Thursday, following last night’s disappointing IPO.

The Washington, DC-based private equity firm priced 30.5 million units at $22 per share, which was below a $23-$25 offering range that already was considered by many to be a discount. It began trading around 35 cents higher in its first hour of trading on NASDAQ, which would increase its valuation to $6.8 billion.

The new issue did not seem to have much impact on Carlyle rivals like Apollo Global Management (APO), The Blackstone Group (BX) or Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR) — all of which trade on the NYSE. Blackstone and KKR opened up, but have since fallen into narrowly negative territory. Apollo has been off just south of 20 cents per share all morning.

When Blackstone went public in June 2007, it closed up 13.1% on its first day of trading. It seems highly unlikely that Carlyle will experience a similar pop, perhaps because Blackstone stock has dropped so precipitously since that time.

Sign up for Dan’s daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: GetTermSheet.com

Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Andreessen envy

Venture capital goes an ugly shade of green.

FORTUNE — Want to get a venture capitalist to roll his eyes dismissively, but don’t have a pet food delivery start-up to pitch? Then just mention how much you admire Andreessen Horowitz.

Never before has a new VC group grown so quickly, raising nearly $2.5 billion in its first three years of existence. Nor has another VC firm become the industry’s undisputed media darling, before having even returned the initial investment on its first fund. No wonder other VCs are a bit miffed.

“There are hundreds of other VCs who have made more money for their investors than either of those guys,” one rival recently told me. “What happens to them if this is a bubble, and it pops? How smart are they going to look?”

Bitter, party of everyone. Not on the record, of course, or to the faces of Andreessen Horowitz staffers. But on background and behind their backs, the envy is epidemic.

Look, I get it. Fundraising is supposed to be hard. Overnight success is anathema to a long-term asset class. And many actually blame Andreessen Horowitz for the tech bubble itself, arguing that the firm’s penchant for paying high prices has fomented industry-wide inflation.

But all of that is secondary to a larger, or at least more prevalent, complaint: Media complicity in the Andreessen Horowitz canonization.

I can’t argue the point. Andreessen Horowitz have been featured on countless magazine covers (including by Fortune), fawning blog posts, conference keynote slots and Marc Andreessen getting named one of Time’s 100 most influential people. But I can, at least, try to explain it. Consider me like Demi Moore in A Few Good Men, when Kevin Pollack asks “Why do you like them so much?”

1. Andreessen Horowitz is better at media management than any other venture capital firm out there. Maybe better than any other financial firm, period.

The primary attribute here is access. If Andreessen Horowitz makes an investment, there is a very good chance that reporters will get phone time with Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Jeff Jordan or whoever else is most appropriate. Same thing if the firm raises a new fund, chooses to give away half its earnings to charity, etc. That may sound obvious, but you’d be amazed how many “brand-name” venture capitalists don’t usually give interviews when they do deals. Seriously, how often do you see John Doerr or Mike Moritz quoted about a Series A round? Or even about a fund close?

I’m not trying to say that we’re grateful, and thus write nice things. I’m saying that they make a significant effort to disseminate their message, whereas others leave us to our own (often cynical) devices. VC enthusiasm can go a long way, since the investor almost always knows more about the new portfolio company than does the reporter.

Equally important: Andreessen Horowitz doesn’t seem to play favorites. I’m sure that Marc and Ben have closer relationships to certain scribes than to others, but the firm seems to offer up its own news on an even playing field. It also hosts several off-the-record dinners each year, at which groups of reporters are invited to break bread with firm execs.

Critics might argue that such meals amount to media manipulation, but they simply reflect how Andreessen Horowitz recognizes the value of access. Not only when it comes to good news, but also when it comes to less flattering situations. If a reporter feels he or she has been treated well by a firm in the past, they will at least give the firm a legitimate chance to plead its case before laying down the written hammer.

2. Few failures. While it is true that Andreessen Horowitz is too green to have had many major successes, it also hasn’t had many major failures. In other words, there isn’t a series of bad deals for us to criticize. In fact, it’s biggest mistake so far might have been choosing to invest in PicPlz at the expense of losing its ability to re-up with Instagram. And that mistake simply meant that Andreessen Horowitz will net around $78 million in profit instead of a couple hundred million.

3. No corruption or other personal foibles. Ever heard ther one about how Andreessen screwed over that entrepreneur. Or how Horowitz dressed down that reporter? Yeah, me neither. Not saying it hasn’t happened — everyone has their moments — but neither name partner has developed a nasty reputation. That matters when developing other narratives.

Again, the envy felt by other VCs toward Andreessen Horowitz is completely understandable. And, someday, they might get some schadenfreude if Andreessen Horowitz missteps cause us reporters to tear Marc and Ben down from the pedestal that we built for them. But, for now, the adoration is deserved. Sorry.

Sign up for Dan’s daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: GetTermSheet.com

Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

M&A

BG Group (LSE: BG) has agreed to sell its 60.1% stake in Brazilian gas distribution company Comgás to Cosan S.A. Indústria e Comércio for approximately $1.8 billion. www.bg-group.com

IBM has agreed to acquire Tealeaf, a San Francisco–based provider of online customer experience management solutions. No financial terms were disclosed. Tealeaf has raised over $12 million in VC funding from firms like Bay Partners, Matrix Partners and Foundation Captial. www.tealeaf.com

Royal DSM (NYSE: DSM) has agreed to acquire Kensey Nash Corp. (Nasdaq: KNSY), an Exton, Penn.-based maker of medical devices and biomaterials, for $360 million. The $38.50 per share offer represents around a 33% premium to yesterday’s closing price for Kensey Nash stock. www.kenseynash.com

Novartis AG has agreed to acquire Fougera Pharmaceuticals, a Melville, N.Y.-based maker of generic dermatology drugs, for $1.5 billion in cash. Sellers include Avista Capital Partners, DLJ Merchant Banking and Nordic Capital. www.novartis.com

Teradata (NYSE: TDC) has agreed to acquire eCircle, a Munich-based provider of cloud-based digital marketing, from TA Associates. No financial terms were disclosed. TA acquired a majority stake in eCircle in early 2010 for more than €60 million. www.ta.com

Zillow Inc.
(Nasdaq: Z) has agreed to acquire RentJuice Corp., a San Francisco-based online real-time data platform for real estate professionals, for $40 million in cash. RentJuice had raised around in VC funding from Highland Capital Partners, NextView Ventures and Tim Draper. www.rentjuice.com

Want deal news in your inbox each morning? Get Term Sheet!

Filed under: Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Will the rent be too damn high for Bernanke?

Rents are soaring, and that’s bad news for inflation — and for Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke’s plans to keep it low. 

FORTUNE – Most of us don’t want to pay higher prices, but there’s a growing debate over whether we should allow inflation to edge a little higher to help the U.S. economy grow.

Earlier this week, Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Engle joined fellow prize winner Paul Krugman in building the case for rapidly rising prices. They say it could help reduce joblessness, with Krugman suggesting that the Federal Reserve tolerate inflation of up to 4% to boost the economy. That’s about double what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has been targeting. Anything higher than that, Bernanke has said, would be “very reckless” and could potentially derail the economic recovery.

He might be right, but economists urging higher prices also have a point worth considering.

Increased rates for rental homes and apartments will serve as a big drive of a rise in inflation. After all, rents make up a relatively significant share (31%) of the consumer price index. And when it comes to core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy items, rents make up an even larger share of about 41%.

MORE: Note to CEOs: Most mergers don’t pay

Nationwide, the price for rentals has risen rapidly as fewer people own homes. During the first three months this year, the median asking price for rentals was $721 per month — up 5.6% from a year earlier — the U.S. Commerce Department reported earlier this week. Meanwhile, even as it’s one of the cheapest times to buy, homeownership has fallen to 65.5% from its 2005 peak of 69.2%.

Indeed, the rental market could soon push inflation higher. Nobody wants to pay their landlords more if they can avoid it. But higher rents could actually be a good thing for both the housing market and the broader economy. As some economists see it, the price of rentals would rise to the point where it becomes cheaper to buy. And if that happens, that could help reverse the housing market’s malaise.

But that has already happened across many U.S. cities, according to Trulia’s latest rent vs. buy index. And the housing market, while indeed healing, is still far from revived, as home prices continue to fall and banks tighten their lending standards.

Of course, the case for more inflation goes beyond the real estate market. If prices rise by just a little, the value of those assets would theoretically rise too. And so could wages, which could leave consumers feeling a little richer. And such a pay bump could make it a little easier for households to pay down their debts. What’s more, as businesses and households expect prices to rise, a little inflation could get them to spend and invest sooner rather than later. And so on.

MORE: Large layoffs loom on Wall Street

But the economy doesn’t work this neatly. Given the litany of factors working against the market, it’s easy to see how such theories are based on some very bold assumptions. For instance, as Fortune’s Stephen Gandel highlighted earlier this week, lending by the big banks dropped during the first three months of 2012 after rising for most of last year.

All this makes Bernanke’s job terribly complicated (as if that wasn’t already obvious). Even as the economy appears to be on firmer footing, the central banker has held his course toward keeping short-term interest rates ultra low until at least the end of 2014. Of course, this might be harder to do if higher prices for rentals start pushing up inflation beyond his 2% target.

At that point, the Fed will probably need to ask how much unemployment might fall if they allowed prices to rise. And, perhaps more importantly, what are the risks of such a move?

Filed under: Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Venture capital deals

Evernote, a Sunnyvale, Calif.-based provider of information capturing, has raised $70 million in Series D funding. Meritech Capital and CBC Capital co-led the round, which was joined by firms like T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., Harbor Pacific Capital, Allen & Company. TechCrunch reports that the deal was done at a $1 billion valuation. The company previously raised over $90 million from Sequoia Capital, Morgenthaler Ventures, DOCOMO Capital and Troika Dialog. www.evernote.com

Nirvanix Inc., a San Diego-based provider of enterprise-class cloud storage services, has raised over $25 million in Series C funding. Khosla Ventures led the round, and was joined by return backers Valhalla Partners, Intel Capital, Mission Ventures and Windward Ventures. The company has now raised $70 million in total VC funding. www.nirvanix.com

CrowdStar, a Burlingame, Calif.–based gaming company that recently announced a switch from social to mobile games, has raised $11.5 million in new VC funding. Return backers include Intel Capital, Time Warner Investments, YouWeb, The9, and NV Investments. www.crowdstar.com

Infinite Power Solutions Inc.
, a Littleton, Colo.-based maker of micro-energy storage devices for embedded applications, has raised $10 million in Series D funding. Backers include Applied Ventures, In-Q-Tel Generation Investment Management, D. E. Shaw Ventures, Polaris Venture Partners and Core Capital Partners. www.infinitepowersolutions.com

Vixar, a Plymouth, Minn.-based developer of vertical cavity surface emitting lasers, has raised $2.5 million in VC funding from Phoenix Venture Partners. www.vixarinc.com

Vungle, a San Francisco-based startup that lets mobile developers promote their apps through video “trailers,” has raised $2 million. Backers include Google Ventures, AOL Ventures, Crosslink Capital, SoftTech VC, SV Angel, 500 Startups, Maynard Webb, Scott McNealy and Tim Draper. www.vungle.com

bMobilized, a New York-based provider of DIY website-to-mobile conversion solutions, has raised $1.5 million in Series A funding from Alliance Venture and Investinor. www.bmobilized.com

AdInsight, a UK-based visitor-level call tracking and call analytics solution, has raised £1.6 million in Series A funding led by Eden Ventures. www.adinsight.com

SRS Medical, a Billerica, Mass.-based maker of devices for the diagnosis of voiding disorders in the urology and gynecology markets, has raised an undisclosed amount of new funding from existing shareholders Schooner Capital and 20/20 HealthCare Partners. www.srsmedical.com

Want deal news in your inbox each morning? Get Term Sheet!

Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Private equity deals

Flexpoint Ford has agreed to acquire GeoVera Insurance Group Holdings Ltd., a Fairfield, Calif.-based provider of specialty residential property insurance, from Friedman Fleischer & Lowe and Hellman & Friedman. No financial terms were disclosed. www.geoveraholdingsltd.com

Francisco Partners has agreed to acquire British enterprise software company Kewill (LSE: KWL) for around £89.5 million, according to the FT. www.kewill.com

HgCapital has acquired Qundis Group, a German provider of submetering devices and systems for consumption-dependent billing of heat and water, from Capcellence. No financial terms were disclosed. www.hgcapital.com

Montagu Private Equity has agreed to acquire CAP, a UK-based provider of vehicle valuation data and related information for the auto market, from Top Right Group (f.k.a. Emap International). No financial terms were disclosed. www.montagu.com

Silver Lake Partners has acquired a 31% equity interest in William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, a Los Angeles-based entertainment agency led by Ari Emanuel. No financial terms were disclosed. www.silverlake.com

Silver Lake Partners last year held talks with Research In Motion Ltd. (Nasdaq: RIMM) about a take-private transaction, according to Bloomberg. The talks took place before Thorsten Heins took over as CEO this past January. www.silverlake.com

Want deal news in your inbox each morning? Get Term Sheet!

Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »

Pre-Marketing: HSBC in hot water

* Money laundering? HSBC in hot water

* VCs in angels’ clothing: Sneaky “deal scouts” in Silicon Valley

* Derek Thompson: How the Big Mac explains global economics

* Morning Call: U.S. futures flattenEuropean shares climb and the Nikkei rebounds.

* It’s back, and worse than ever: Forbes Midas List

* Alexis Goldstein: Why I left Wall Street in order to Occupy it

* No merger partner: Dewey & LeBoeuf is running out of options

* Players vs. owners: Presidential race divides pro sports teams

* Bijan Sabet: Are VCs more loyal to entrepreneurs or investors?

* Any thoughts? How did this recession avoid office rampage killings?

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

Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

May 4 2012 | Posted in Finance Blog | Read More »