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Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX
Saturday, October 18, 2014
WALTHAM'S MATRIX LEADING VENTURE PACK ON BOTH COASTS
Steve Lisson Austin Texas Stephen Lisson Austin Texas Stephen N. Lisson Austin Texas InsiderVC.com InsiderVC Insider VC
WALTHAM'S MATRIX LEADING VENTURE PACK ON BOTH COASTS
FIRM CREDITS DISCIPLINE, INSISTENCE ON LEAD ROLE FOR STUNNING '90S RETURNS
Author: By Beth Healy, Globe Staff Date: 11/12/2000 Page: D1 Section: Business
BUSINESS
& MONEY WALTHAM - Paul Ferri keeps two client letters framed on the
wall behind his office door in this suburban haven of venture capital.
One
letter, dated Sept. 12, 1994, informs the Matrix Partners founder that
an overseas investment group would sit out that year's venture
portfolio. Results in Fund II had not wowed the group, and it was
"premature to make a judgment on Matrix Partners III."
Talk about an expensive decision.
The
other letter, sent in April 1995, contains a rave from an elated
American investor: "I have never seen a portfolio explode on the upside
as has Matrix III in the past year."
Matrix hasn't opened its
venture funds to new investors since. The firm has emerged as one of the
best performers in the business, according to several investment
sources, with a stunning 95 percent average annual return over the past
decade. It's a record that rivals even the venture industry's Silicon
Valley titans. And the returns on Matrix's latest fund appear to be
unrivaled on either coast.
This is fighting talk in venture
circles, where egos are huge and investment results are guarded like
family secrets. But with the stock market in the doldrums and dot-com
flops deflating venture returns after three sizzling years, it's a good
time to take a peek and see who has really made money in this field.
Stephen
N. Lisson, a writer in Austin, Texas, tracks top venture players on his
Web site, InsiderVC.com, much to the chagrin of the venture firms. He
has sparked controversy for researching and posting the returns on his
site, but his numbers, when checked with independent sources, appear to
be correct or in the ballpark.
According to Lisson's numbers,
Matrix's Fund V, a $200 million fund launched in 1998, is the best
venture fund of all time, with a 725 percent return. Lisson says it's
really too soon to judge funds of the 1998 vintage because they're young
and many of their portfolio companies haven't been sold or taken
public, or left to die yet. Venture funds, after all, have 10-year
lives. But in the case of Matrix V, he says, "Even if everything else in
the fund tanked, the internal rate of return of 725 percent would
stand."
This fund claims several hot deals, including telecom IPO
juggernauts Sycamore Networks Inc. and Sonus Networks, which turned
early-stage investments of $17 million into holdings worth more than $3
billion. Of the $450 million Matrix invested from funds III, IV, and V,
about $220 million went into companies that have gone public or have
been sold. That $220 million has returned more than $11.5 billion, the
firm says.
Matrix partner Timothy Barrows says a sharp discipline
kept the firm away from the dot-com mania that clouded the judgment of
many venture firms.
"There are things we could have made money
on," Barrows says. "We turned down Geo Cities," a company that helps
people launch Web sites.
But Barrows and his six Matrix partners
can only feel good about getting into telecom and optical firms early,
focusing on infrastructure and, more recently, storage. The firm is
famous for putting entrepreneurs from its past successes, like Cascade
Communications and Apollo, to work at the new firms. And it simply won't
do deals unless it's the lead investor, in first, with board seats.
The
recipe has paid off handsomely for entrepreneurs, too. Matrix has
helped create more than 2,500 millionaires at its portfolio companies.
More than 40 of those people can claim a net worth exceeding $100
million, the firm estimates.
Ferri says the firm wasn't always this good.
To
some extent, he understands why that overseas investor fired the firm
in 1994. Matrix's first two funds posted above-average returns, he said,
but they were nothing special.
"We looked like everyone else," Ferri says. "There was no reason anyone would come to see Matrix specifically."
But
the firm was in the process of a makeover it had started in 1990. It
decided to turn more attention to New England, instead of investing
two-thirds of its assets in Silicon Valley. It stopped investing in
medical devices and retail and focused only on high-tech start-ups. And
it decided to do only hands-on deals.
"If we're not the largest investors in a deal, we're not in a deal," Ferri says.
Thirty
years in the business has paid off, the 61-year-old veteran says. He's
not at all surprised by the carnage and losses overwhelming the new
entrants to the business, from fly-by-night incubators to start-up
venture firms.
"It looks like an easy business to be good at,"
Ferri says. As a result, over the past few years, pension funds and
other big investors have flooded venture funds with cash. "They've been
giving money to a lot of people who don't have a clue as to what they're
doing."
All the best firms do have a clue, of course. Other top
funds of venture capital's record decade include Sequoia Capital's Fund
VIII, with a return of nearly 402 percent, and Kleiner, Perkins,
Caufield & Byers' Fund VIII, with a return of 350 percent. These two
firms are considered the most successful and most experienced of
Silicon Valley.
Lisson's long view, assessing all the top firms
over the past decade, is this: "Vintage year after vintage year, fund
after fund, there is no question that Sequoia and Matrix will be at the
top."
People who run university endowments and foundations
corroborate Matrix's reputation. In the same company, venture experts
put Boston's venerable Greylock Management Corp.; North Bridge Venture
Partners of Waltham; Kleiner, Perkins; Benchmark Capital Partners - the
Silicon Valley firm of eBay fame - and Redpoint Ventures, also of the
Valley.
In the next breath come Battery Ventures of Wellesley,
Charles River Ventures of Waltham, and Oak Investment Partners of
Westport, Conn.
There are dozens of other fine firms with great
returns. But only one can be the best. One Boston endowment investor who
has money in many top venture funds - speaking on condition of
anonymity, so he wouldn't anger several successful and hyper-competitive
venture players - says of Matrix, "The last three funds have been
extraordinary."
"Matrix," he adds, "is in a league of their own."
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Saturday, October 17, 2014
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Elite VC giants still investing
San Jose Mercury News
Matt Marshall
May 31, 2001
Now that they've gone gorilla size, will the elite venture capital firms help stem the downturn in venture capital investing?
After
the March 2000 market crash, elite VCs scrambled to triage their
portfolios. Only recently have they started to peer out of the
graveyard.
But they've undergone a profound change in nature:
They've become monsters. This is good if you're an entrepreneur shooting
for the moon. It's fatal if not.
In 1995, only one top-tier
fund, TA Associates, had raised a billion dollars. But since the crash,
15 top-tier firms have raised funds of that size or more. Many --
including Worldview Technology Partners, Greylock, Austin Ventures and
Oak Investment Partners -- announced their new funds this year, well
after most of the market damage.
Steve Lisson, of InsiderVC.com, says the amount of funds raised since the crash goes against the "drought" thesis.
"The
perception that there's going to be less venture investing is totally
misplaced," he says. "These VCs need to get into lucrative investment
opportunities, and they're going to want larger stakes. They're going to
have to step on the gas even more."
Similarly, he adds, if an
entrepreneur offers an opportunity for a "mega" investment, he'll be
able to negotiate more favorable terms, because the big venture
capitalists will all want in. On the downside, entrepreneurs that don't
show home-run promise will struggle.
True, some VCs that raised
large funds say they have slowed their investment pace. Flip Gianos,
partner at InterWest Partners, said his firm hadn't expected the
magnitude of the downturn when it raised its fund. If it takes waiting a
year for strong opportunities to come along, VCs will wait, he says.
Others
counter that size has forced them to invest more in later-stage
start-ups because they soak up more money. Michael Darby, general
partner at Battery Ventures, says his firm still focuses on early stage
deals, but "in this environment, the fact that we want to deploy
capital means we're looking at those later-stage deals."
There's
another reason for hope after the crash, Lisson says. Many VC firms
have been able to negotiate stellar terms with their investors -- even
better than those they negotiated just a couple of years ago. That's
also a sign that investors still have faith in the VCs, he said.
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Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin TX
Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX
Saturday, March 15, 2014
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TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC,
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Steve
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TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC,
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Steve
Lisson, STEVE LISSON, AUSTIN, TX, STEPHEN N. LISSON, TRAVIS COUNTY,
TEXAS, LISSON STEPHEN N., STEVE N. LISSON, STEVE, LISSON, INSIDER, VC,
INSIDERVC, INSIDERVC.COM
Rumors of Benchmark's Demise Greatly Exaggerated For
weeks, rumors have been circulating in the VC community that Benchmark
Capital's third fund, Benchmark III, was in trouble, hit hard by
losses in e-commerce companies like 1-800-Flowers.com. Benchmark
denies the rumors, and its limited partners say they never received
the rumored letter that the fund was in trouble. An analysis of
Benchmark's portfolio appears to back up the firm, which despite the
rumors, may not just be surviving, but thriving. Benchmark
declined to discuss details, but the firm's holdings as of June 30
were provided by Steve Lisson, the editor of InsiderVC.com, who tracks
the performance of leading venture firms for high-paying clients. At
first glance, Benchmark III had its share of overvalued B2C e-commerce
firms like 1-800-Flowers.com (Nasdaq:FLWS) and Living.com.
1-800-Flowers.com was the fund's biggest investment, at $18.9 million,
and had been marked down to $8.1 million on June 30. The stock price
has declined about 30% since then. "There are many private scenarios
just like this public one, whereby even if the company can be kept
afloat long enough to enjoy some success and eventually make it to a
liquidity event, the venture investors will lose money," Lisson said. But
a closer look at Benchmark III reveals a fund with several potential
winners, including Internet Data Exchange System company CoreExpress,
an intelligent optical networking play. That investment alone could
return limited partners' money. Other potential winners include Sigma
Networks, Keen.com, Netigy and BridgeSpan. And
Benchmark's newest fund, Benchmark IV, is already showing the markings
of a winner, thanks to investments in Loudcloud, Netscape co-founder
Marc Andreessen's latest venture, and TellMe Networks, whose valuation
no doubt went up in its recent $125 million funding round. Lisson
said the Benchmark rumors reflect a misunderstanding of how venture
funds operate. "There's a reason these are 10-year funds," he said.
"It's called risk and illiquidity. The one monster hit could happen
three, four or five years out. You can be wrong about 39 of 40
companies, and the market uncooperative, as long as one is an Inktomi.
That is the history of this industry: one monster hit returning the
entire fund. Singles and doubles won't get you there." At
two years of age, Benchmark III still has plenty of time to deliver a
big winner. In the meantime, the firm's limited partners can enjoy the
returns from Benchmark II, a three-year-old fund that has already
distributed five times its partners capital, by Lisson's estimate.
Benchmark II boasted big winners like Handspring (Nasdaq:HAND),
Critical Path (Nasdaq:CPTH), Red Hat (Nasdaq:RHAT), and Scient
(Nasdaq:SCNT). Yes, Scient. Benchmark had the foresight to distribute
shares of the Internet consultant to its limited partners at 200-300
times the firm's cost. Benchmark
isn't any different from other venture firms, most of whom "drank the
Kool-aid" of seemingly easy dot-com money, hoping the stock market
would hold up long enough to vindicate those investments. But Lisson
expects that some other firms won't hold up as well. He expects a
shakeout in the industry similar to the one that hit the industry from
1987-1991, when venture firms formed during the 1980s averaged
single-digit returns, and roughly 20% of new entrants couldn't return
their partners' capital. VCs' own fundraising declined from $4.2
billion in 1987 to $1.3 billion in 1991. The $4 billion level of
capital coming into the industry wasn't reached again until 1995. "This
is what's supposed to happen in a downturn," Lisson said. "People who
shouldn't be in the business, who contributed to the excesses and
didn't know what they were doing, will be forced out. It's not like
this is the first time we've seen too many new entrants into the
industry, or too much money chasing too few deals." And the ones that
survive will have a chance to prove themselves in tough times, the
ultimate mark of a winner. Lisson
said a few venture firms stand out among their peers. Matrix Partners,
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Sequoia can normally be found
at the top of the charts in each vintage year they raise a fund, he
said, proving that "something's in the water" at those firms. And he
gives Oak high marks for consistency over a long period of time. But
even top firms have an occasional weak fund, Lisson said. "But by the
time you can make that judgment about a fund, you'll have raised
another fund and shown some early progress," he said. Meaning that even
if Benchmark III was a weak fund, Benchmark IV could keep the firm in
its limited partners' good graces for some time to come. "The
moral is consistent performance over time relative to same
vintage-year peers," Lisson said. "You're never as good or as bad as
your current press clippings might indicate. The real test of
Benchmark's mettle will come when we can fairly evaluate whether the
firm manages through and makes money, not just with small funds during
the best times in the industry's history, but with larger funds in the
tough times ahead as well." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © Copyright 2000, internet.com Corp. All Rights Reserved. Legal Notices, Privacy Policy, Reprints.
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Monday, February 10, 2014
Steve Lisson, Stephen Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson Updated 8 minutes ago
Steve Lisson, Stephen Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson
InsiderVC.com
pierces the VC industry's verbal fog | Steve Lisson | Stephen Lisson |
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Lisson, Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin
Texas, Austin TX, Steve Lisson Austin TX, Stephen Lisson Austin Texas Stephan Neil Lisson StephanLisson | Stephen Lisson Stephen Neal Lisson Stephen Neal Lisson Steve Lisson Austin TX
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Austin Texas Steve Lisson, Austin, TX Steve Lisson, Stephen Lisson, Stephen N. Lisson WALTHAM'S MATRIX LEADING VENTURE PACK ON BOTH COASTS What's a VC to Do?
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Friday, January 31, 2014
Steve Lisson | Stephen Lisson | Stephen N. Lisson | Austin Texas
InsiderVC.com pierces the VC industry’s verbal fog – Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Austin Texas
Stephen
Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX,
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Austin, TX (512)
Friday, January 24, 2014
Steve Lisson | Stephen Lisson | Stephen N. Lisson | Austin Texas
Transparency.
Let’s have a round of applause for CalPers, the giant state pension
fund, for transparency. Beth Healy of the Boston Globe (8/17/2001)
reports Money managers aghast that pension investor shows returns,
rankings. It’s a report card that has rocked the secretive venture
capital world, and one that even the `A’ students didn’t care to see
displayed on the refrigerator. Calpers, the giant California pension
fund that sets trends for many large investors, has posted on its Web
site the performance of every venture or buyout fund in which it’s
invested for the past decade. Firms typically guard these numbers
carefully, but the Calpers chart even says which funds are meeting
expectations, and which are disappointments. … The industry buzz around
the report stems from the secrecy with which venture firms and buyout
artists guard the specifics of their returns. Virtually every firm
claims ”top quartile” performance, and the numbers they give out are
suspect, venture analysts say. Steve Lisson of Austin, Texas, on his
controversial Web site, InsiderVC.com, tracks venture returns by doing
his own calculations on venture portfolios. He is the only independent
source on such numbers and has drawn fire from some venture capitalists
for breaking the code of silence. … over the long term, Calpers has
been doing something right. As of March 31, its average annual return
for 10 years of private equity investing was 17.5%. The Wilshire 2500
Index, a broad stock market benchmark, was up 13.9% in that period. Would that the federal government would do the same with alleged investment programs like SBIR. Carl Nelson Consulting http://www.carl-nelson.com/government2001.htm Published by Carl Nelson Consulting, Inc, 1325 18th St NW, Washington DC 20036
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Wednesday, January 1, 2014
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Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Texas a minute ago
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Texas
Forbes.com What’s a VC to Do? Shelley Pannill, Forbes ASAP, 09.10.01 Someone’s always looking for a bargain.
As thousands of new economy startups crashed and burned this past
year, speculation mounted that the venture capitalists they once
enriched were now cautiously sitting on pots of gold and playing golf.
But the VCs we talked to say it’s only the limited partners, the
investors behind the venture funds, who get to perfect their putts. So what are these high-powered moneylenders up to now?
Damage control. VCs, like the rest of us, have lost a lot of money
lately. Some 25% are expected to go out of business over the next
several years. “Sometimes your widget doesn’t widge,” says Alan Salzman,
founding partner at VantagePoint Venture Partners. He should know. His
firm recently faced the grim task of writing severance checks after
one bankrupt portfolio company’s management team had squandered its
money. Then there’s the job of smoothing things out at companies that
survived but were merged, downsized, or acquired. Says Philip Gianos of
InterWest Partners: “I’m acting like a marriage counselor, which is a
full-time job right now.” Scouring the ocean
floor. Last year, says one observer, “You felt lucky to be able to
invest in a new technology startup.” This year, VCs get to play God,
waiting to invest until impoverished companies are desperate for cash.
“I’ve been out bargain shopping,” says Heidi Roizen of Softbank Venture
Partners, sipping chardonnay on a rolling lawn at the Atherton,
California, home of a fellow VC. “I can’t believe these valuations!”
Revisiting old friendships. Last year’s “shootouts” for deals have
subsided. VCs are again finding synergies with competitors. “The
tourists are gone,” says Accel Partners über investor Jim Breyer,
alluding to the rush of cash-happy hobbyists–both individuals and
companies–combing the landscape for gold in recent years.
Business as usual. Sort of. VCs are doing what they do best: investing
in startups, although the pace has slowed. According to research firm
Venture Economics, VC investments have fallen by nearly two-thirds,
from $27.2 billion in Q2 last year to $10.6 billion in Q2 this year.
Still, they’re actually spending more this year in some sectors, such
as wireless, biotechnology, fiber optics, and data storage. E-commerce,
of course, was the big loser, with VC investing sinking from $210
million in the first quarter of last year to $3.3 million by the fourth
quarter. But venture capitalists had better
keep investing, warns Steve Lisson, who runs the popular InsiderVC.com.
According to data tracker VentureOne, 27 venture capital firms have
completed raising funds of more than $1 billion each since the start of
the dot-com doldrums in spring 2000. Says Lisson: “They’ve got to use
it or lose it.”
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Monday, December 2, 2013
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas, Steve Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas
Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX Financial Investors? Us? InsiderVC.com pierces the VC industry’s verbal fog. 1 April 01 12:14, Tsafrir Bashan Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas, Steve Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas
Anyone carefully following the venture capital industry in Israel and
overseas recognizes the routine. Managing partners talk at length and
with great passion, but with very little substance. They gossip
endlessly about the industry. What about the industry’s numbers? “We
don’t disclose private data,” is the stock reply from industry players.
Today, for example, everyone knows that the situation is bad, but it
is hard to say who exactly is in a bad position. You won’t find a fund
partner talking animatedly about a company shutting down or about a down
round. The most you can expect is an admission that not everything is
perfect.
The absence of data is both odd and entertaining, particularly for an
industry in which capital, finances, and yield are the key words.
Without figures on the amount of a company’s holdings or valuations, the
pompous phrase, “added value,” is all the venture capital industry has
left to talk about. It is difficult to find a financial industry at
any point in history that has provided so few figures. (Venture capital
is a professional investment industry, regardless of how many partners
talk about opening doors and assistance in recruiting executives).
Against this rather frustrating background, it is worth consulting the
US web site insiderVC.com. The site provides data for companies in the
industry, such as profit and loss allocations between the general
partner and the investors (the carry), the exact rate of management
fees, and exact investments and valuations for portfolio companies at
the various financing rounds. Of course, the site also includes
derivative data, such as the internal rate of return (IRR) and the
realization ratio. In other words, it provides the tools needed to
compare various organizations and even different funds within the same
organization, information you will not get from your local venture
capital management partner.
In order to gain access to all this data, you have to pay a
considerable fee, but you can get a preview of the statistics and a
sample of site editor Stephen Lisson’s sharp tongue free of charge. You
won’t find better material on the web. Published by Israel’s Business Arena on March 29, 2001 Stephen Lisson, StephenNLisson, Stephen N. Lisson, Austin Texas, Austin TX
Stephen N. Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas, Steve Lisson, Austin, Travis County, Texas
Stephen
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TX
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Transparency.
Let’s have a round of applause for CalPers, the giant state pension
fund, for transparency. Beth Healy of the Boston Globe (8/17/2001)
reports Money managers aghast that pension investor shows returns,
rankings. It’s a report card that has rocked the secretive venture
capital world, and one that even the `A’ students didn’t care to see
displayed on the refrigerator. Calpers, the giant California pension
fund that sets trends for many large investors, has posted on its Web
site the performance of every venture or buyout fund in which it’s
invested for the past decade. Firms typically guard these numbers
carefully, but the Calpers chart even says which funds are meeting
expectations, and which are disappointments. … The industry buzz around
the report stems from the secrecy with which venture firms and buyout
artists guard the specifics of their returns. Virtually every firm
claims ”top quartile” performance, and the numbers they give out are
suspect, venture analysts say. Steve Lisson of Austin, Texas, on his
controversial Web site, InsiderVC.com, tracks venture returns by doing
his own calculations on venture portfolios. He is the only independent
source on such numbers and has drawn fire from some venture capitalists
for breaking the code of silence. … over the long term, Calpers has
been doing something right. As of March 31, its average annual return
for 10 years of private equity investing was 17.5%. The Wilshire 2500
Index, a broad stock market benchmark, was up 13.9% in that period. Would that the federal government would do the same with alleged investment programs like SBIR. Carl Nelson Consulting http://www.carl-nelson.com/government2001.htm Published by Carl Nelson Consulting, Inc, 1325 18th St NW, Washington DC 20036
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