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TheFunded.com is an online community of entrepreneurs to research, rate, and review funding sources worldwide. In addition, TheFunded.com allows entrepreneurs to view and share term sheets, to assist one another finding good investors, and to discuss the many facets of operating a business. Enjoy!

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NEW TAGS: Strategy (51)   Terms (31)   Compensation (27)   Lawyers (23)   Materials (20)    More

Us East Angel Round: Hourly Workers (Retail, Foodservice, Hospitality)

TheFunded.com Connect Pitch

Posted by System about 4 hours ago

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Should We Stop Fundraising And Focus On Our Mousetrap?

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous about 8 hours ago

Tags: Preparation Strategy Bootstrapping

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Great Fund: Solvency Issues

Fund: Clearstone Venture Partners

Posted by Anonymous about 18 hours ago

PUBLIC:

There is no question that Clearstone is a top tier fund in an under-served market. Word on the street is that they have been trying to close a new fund for too long, and the firm is facing solvency issues.

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Raising Capital Via A Third Party

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous about 19 hours ago

Tags: Preparation Intermediaries Advisors

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Experience With Lehman Brothers / Tom Banahan

Fund: Lehman Brothers Private Equity

Posted by Anonymous about 21 hours ago

PUBLIC:

I have worked at a company with Tom Banahan of Lehman Brothers Venture Capital on the board and would recommend him unreservedly. He is hard working, fair, insightful and helpful - a rare combination in VCs who sit on boards. During the fundraising process, Lehman's diligence process was a little heavyweight, but in the end we picked them as the investor, and it proved to be a good decision. I would gladly have him on the board of my next company.

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Equity In Exchange For Website

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous about 22 hours ago

Tags: Operations Developers Technology Barter

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The Limited Partner Shuffle: It Affects You...

TheFunded.com Advice

Posted by Mr. Smith about 21 hours ago

Tags: Venture Business Limited Partners

PUBLIC:

Investors in venture funds, called limited partners, are pulling out or selling their commitments to provide essential capital to the venture model, causing the "Limited Partner Shuffle." Some experts are quoted as saying as much as 10% of all private equity positions will change hands this year in hasty transactions to generate liquidity, including premium positions by top-tier institutions like Harvard. See below:

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pi...

What does this mean and why is it relevant to entrepreneurs? A quick overview of venture capital will help to answer these questions.

Venture firms raise money to invest from limited partners (LPs), who are normally endowments, pension funds, insurance companies, and other institutions that manage large amounts of capital. An investment in venture capital is considered a high risk asset class with the potential for high returns. The professional consulting firms that publish guidelines for how limited partners should allocate money across asset classes generally recommend that a small portion go into venture capital, sometimes less than 1%. This small percentage still amounts to many billions of dollars per year being entrusted to venture firms by limited partners, who control trillions of dollars.

Generally speaking, a commitment to invest in a venture fund does not require the limited partner to transfer money until the venture firm makes an investment in a portfolio company. So, a $100 MM venture fund does not have $100 MM sitting in the bank. Instead, as venture firms make successive investments, they collect money from their limited partners and distribute that money to portfolio companies in rounds. To cover operating expenses, the venture firms separately collect approximately 2% of the invested capital as a management fee.

In order to ensure that each limited partner honors their obligation to provide money when needed, which is referred to as a capital call, venture funds implement onerous terms for forfeit or default. The most common default protection is to wipe out any returns from all previous invested capital. This encourages an active secondary market for limited partner positions, since it makes more sense to sell a commitment than to lose the value of the money invested to date.

Fast forward to Q4 2008, and you have the perfect storm of venture capital destruction. First, a relatively large number of limited partners, such as AIG and Lehman Brothers, are facing solvency issues, and they can no longer honor any capital calls to venture capital funds. The large scale dissolution of limited partners is something new.

Second, as the equity and debt markets have collapsed, the allocation of limited partners to venture capital has increased as a percentage. If an LP has $1 billion under management and 1%, or $10 MM, committed to venture capital and if that $1 billion suddenly becomes $500 MM, the allocation schedule of 1% stipulates that the LP now only invest $5 MM into venture capital. Many LPs have charters that strictly govern these percentages, forcing the LP to sell commitments in the secondary market to comply.

Third, many potential buyers in the secondary market have liquidity issues of their own. The purchase of a commitment requires resources to buy the asset, resources to pay for future capital calls, and resources to cover management fees at a time where the future is uncertain. The lack of liquidity and uncertainty has caused a collapse in the secondary market values, with many commitments selling for $.50 on the invested dollar or less. This in turn has encouraged limited partners that might otherwise commit to new positions in venture funds to consider purchasing discounted positions in existing funds.

Lastly, venture capital returns have been hard hit by the downturn, reducing or eliminating the ability of certain funds to get back any of the original invested capital. Portfolio company acquisitions are on hold, and the IPO market is frozen. For many limited partners, investing more money into certain venture firms is literally throwing good money after bad when cash is king.

Most venture firms worldwide are facing problems as a result of this "Limited Partner Shuffle." The best firms are distracted by helping limited partners transfer commitments. Other firms will cease making investments for some period of time, possibly forever. Still other firms will not be able to collect their management fees and go under in the next fews months. Nearly everyone will be fundraising and spending a lot less time with their portfolio companies.

Many entrepreneurs are now pitching firms without a future, wasting invaluable time. These "Walking Dead Funds" are going through the motions until the other shoe drops, forcing them out of business. Other entrepreneurs are counting on investments or participation from funds that have no ability to deliver any capital. Lastly, there are entrepreneurs with soon-to-be-insolvent firms that hold controlling preferred equity positions and Board seats, leaving a potentially deadly vacancy in governance and voting control. How do you sell when your primary shareholder is no longer around to grant approval?

As an entrepreneur in today's market, you need to understand the relative health of the investors that you deal with. Start by asking them directly about their financial resources and the state of their limited partners. Don't hesitate to ask other entrepreneurs and other funds as well. You future may depend on having good information about the solvency of investors that you deal with.

[Please reprint any or all of this post. Entrepreneurs need to know.]

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Us West Electronics First Round Terms

TheFunded.com Terms

Posted by System 1 day ago

Us East Angel Round: Online Games And Education

TheFunded.com Connect Pitch

Posted by System 1 day ago

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Feedback On Jean Hammond (Boston Lead)

Fund: Golden Seeds

Posted by Anonymous 1 day ago

PRIVATE: Members Only (861 Characters)

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Utilizing Advisors To Find Investors

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous 1 day ago

Tags: Preparation Advisors

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Ruthless Ray

Fund: Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers

Posted by Anonymous 1 day ago

PUBLIC:

Ray brings new meaning to the terms "no holds barred" and "all is fair in love and war." This guy will do anything to win, literally anything. Forget about ethics: he'll slander people in the media, steal intellectual property, take meetings under false pretenses, yank term sheets, invest in competing companies, etc. It may be a game to him, but real people get hurt with this type of behavior and industries face setbacks.

If that were not enough, some limited partners have whispered that his investments at KP have returned zero.

To be within this Ray's sphere of influence in business as either a friend or a foe is dangerous. If you get a meeting at KP and Ruthless Ray shows up, I would recommend that you walk out. You don't need the headache, and entrepreneurs should not support destructive behavior in any investor.

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...On The Frontier Of Insolvency

Fund: DFJ Frontier

Posted by Mr. Smith 1 day ago

PUBLIC:

Frontier is a really small fund founded after the last bubble with nice people, but no resolve. They will pull a signed term sheet due to "the economic climate," which makes you wonder if they have the commitment from their limited partners to continue operations.

They probably have next to no money left and are looking for a grand slam home run. Sounds like bad news to me.

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Us West Series A: Online Personals

TheFunded.com Connect Pitch

Posted by System 1 day ago

Canada Angel Round: Business

TheFunded.com Connect Pitch

Posted by System 1 day ago

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Wasting Time In New England?

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous 1 day ago

Tags: Pitching Location

Asia / Pacific Series A: Outsourcing

TheFunded.com Connect Pitch

Posted by System 1 day ago

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Pittsburgh Area

Fund: BlueTree Allied Angels

Posted by takingtigermountain on 2008-12-01

PUBLIC:

This fund wants to stick with "Company headquarters in Western PA, Eastern Ohio, or Northern WV"

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Not Doing Investments

Fund: Chesapeake Emerging Opportunities Club

Posted by takingtigermountain on 2008-12-01

PUBLIC:

According to their site, "the Club is fully invested and are not making any new investments. "

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Close To Philadelphia

Fund: Robin Hood Ventures

Posted by takingtigermountain on 2008-12-01

PUBLIC:

They claim to only deal with companies within an hour drive of Philadelphia.

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2008 New England Venture Summit

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous on 2008-12-01

Tags: Venture Business Conferences

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Best Bank For Company Account

TheFunded.com Discussion

Posted by Anonymous on 2008-12-01

Tags: Operations Banks

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They Have A Good Reputation

Fund: Inflexion Partners

Posted by Anonymous on 2008-12-01

PUBLIC:

They have a good reputation locally being one of the few early-stage funds in our area.

PRIVATE: Members Only (327 Characters)

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Weekly Leaderboard: 70 Top Rated Investors

TheFunded.com Lists

Posted by System on 2008-12-01

PUBLIC:

Top 10 for 2008-12-01:

1. Gilman Louie (5.0 by 6) from Alsop Louie Partners
2. Peter Sinclair (5.0 by 6) from Leapfrog Ventures
3. Paul H. Klingenstein (5.0 by 5) from Aberdare Ventures
4. Jed Katz (4.8889 by 9) from Draper Fisher Jurvetson Gotham Ventures
5. Eric Archambeau (4.875 by 8) from Wellington Partners
6. Rob Theis (4.875 by 8) from Scale Venture Partners
7. Ross A. Jaffe (4.8571 by 7) from Versant Ventures
8. Mark Gorenberg (4.8333 by 6) from Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
9. David Ladd (4.8 by 5) from Mayfield Fund
10. James D. Robinson III (4.8 by 5) from RRE Ventures

Remaining for 2008-12-01:

11. Peter Thiel (4.8 by 5), 12. David Carlick (4.75 by 8), 13. Donald B. Milder (4.7143 by 7), 14. Nate Redmond (4.7143 by 7), 15. William J. Link (4.7143 by 7), 16. Mark S. Menell (4.6667 by 9), 17. Paul Maeder (4.6667 by 6), 18. Steven D. Arnold (4.6667 by 6), 19. Stuart Ellman (4.6667 by 6), 20. David Sze (4.6364 by 11), 21. Michael Kim (4.6364 by 11), 22. Bill Elmore (4.5714 by 7), 23. Michael Moritz (4.5455 by 11), 24. Curtis Feeny (4.5 by 6), 25. Peter Solvik (4.5 by 6), 26. Bijan Salehizadeh, M.D. (4.4286 by 7), 27. Allen Morgan (4.4286 by 7), 28. Bill Tai (4.4286 by 7), 29. Brook H. Byers (4.4 by 5), 30. David Stern (4.375 by 8), 31. Richard M. Ferrari (4.375 by 8), 32. Howard Morgan (4.3333 by 9), 33. Fred Wilson (4.3333 by 9), 34. Stewart Alsop (4.3333 by 9), 35. David Hornik (4.3333 by 6), 36. Doug Pepper (4.3333 by 6), 37. Jon Callaghan (4.3333 by 6), 38. Bruce Dunlevie (4.2857 by 7), 39. Ken Howery (4.2857 by 7), 40. Michael T. Fitzgerald (4.2857 by 7), 41. William D. Porteous (4.2857 by 7), 42. Mitchell Kertzman (4.2727 by 11), 43. Joshua Kopelman (4.2609 by 23), 44. Phil Black (4.25 by 8), 45. Edward L. Cahill (4.2 by 5), 46. Thatcher Bell (4.2 by 5), 47. Mike Maples Jr. (4.1818 by 11), 48. Bill Kaiser (4.1667 by 6), 49. Ken Elefant (4.1667 by 6), 50. Richard A. D'Amore (4.1667 by 6), 51. Shawn T. Carolan (4.1667 by 6), 52. Roelof Botha (4.1333 by 15), 53. Hodong Nam (4.125 by 8), 54. Tom Cole (4.125 by 8), 55. Gregory C. Gretsch (4.125 by 8), 56. Anthony P. Lee (4.1111 by 9), 57. Brian Ascher (4.0 by 14), 58. James Slavet (4.0 by 8), 59. Andrew L. Zalasin (4.0 by 7), 60. John Burke (4.0 by 6), 61. Ashmeet Sidana (4.0 by 6), 62. Bob Pavey (4.0 by 6), 63. Brent Ahrens (4.0 by 5), 64. David Jones (4.0 by 5), 65. David Min (4.0 by 5), 66. Jay Watkins (4.0 by 5), 67. Mark Hatfield (4.0 by 5), 68. Richard W. Levandov (4.0 by 5), 69. Soren Nielsen (4.0 by 5), 70. Tim Connor (4.0 by 5),

 

EMAIL: INTERMEDIA | RECRUITING: AC LION | PITCH: IdeaCrossing | SERVICES: Inventure | ANGELS: Open-Deals | NETWORK: MeetingWave

PRIVATE: Members Only

Canada Software/B2 B First Round Terms

TheFunded.com Terms

Posted by System on 2008-11-30