The tech sector's silent alarm: Venture capital drying up
In a dramatic shift, IPOs have all but disappeared in '08
Computerworld - The tech sector is experiencing a crash -- not of stock prices, which rebounded somewhat on Wall Street on Tuesday -- but in its ability to take new companies public.
So far this year, there have been just six venture-backed initial public offerings; last year, there were 86, according to the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). The recent collapse of investment banks Lehman Brothers Holdings and Bear Stearns Cos. is exacerbating the problem.
Last week, the Arlington, Va.-based NVCA's board, whose members include leading venture capital firms, agreed to create several blue ribbon committees to investigate the causes behind the dramatic decline in IPOs. Whether the falloff is due to regulation that emerged after the dot-com bust or the recent failure of investments banks, the committees are charged with recommending fixes that would get venture capital flowing again.
If there are no IPOs, "the economy as a whole starts to stagnate, because these are the companies that really create jobs and move the economy at the end of the day," said Mark Heesen, president of the NVCA.
There were no venture-backed IPOs issued in the second quarter of this year -- the first time that's happened since 1978. In announcing those results in July (download PDF), Heesen said it indicated a serious problem for the economy. "We view this quarter as 'the canary in the coal mine,' " he said.
Two months later, the world found out what killed the canary.
PricewaterhouseCoopers, in a report released Monday (download PDF), said the venture-backed IPO market is now at a 30-year low -- even though venture capital firms are continuing to invest and are "raising funds at a steady pace." That means it may take longer for a company to move to a public offering, but the firm will be "even more stable" once the IPO takes place, it said.
Venture capital can be a risky business, with IPOs often the payoff for an investment. So it's not surprising that venture capital firms have continued to make substantial investments in new firms, such as Facebook. In the second quarter of this year, venture capitalists invested $7.4 billion in 990 deals, with the software industry getting 219 deals valued at $1.25 billion. But if it becomes increasingly difficult to take companies public, it may become harder for start-ups to get funding.
In the dot-com era, Silicon Valley's tech industry had ready access to boutique investment firms that were ultimately taken over by the big New York firms, said Mark Jensen, national managing partner of Deloitte LLP's venture capital services. With Lehman and Bear Stearns now gone, "that's a radical transformation on Wall Street that we're just beginning to see and think about what the consequences will be."
Bailout roundup
- Microsoft's lobbying on bailout bill fails to sway votes
- FAQ: The IT worker's Wall Street meltdown worry list
- Gartner: Wall Street woes won't take down tech
- The tech sector's silent alarm: VC drying up
- House site struggles with bailout-related e-mails
- IT Blogwatch: Market crisis -- watch bloggers react
- Black Monday hits Nasdaq, likely to affect IT
- Wall Street meltdown to drive risk management investments
- Stock drop smacks tech harder than most
- Wall Street's collapse computer science's gain?
- Bailout won't keep Wall Street from offshoring


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- The CFO Guide to Budgeting Software
- A mid-sized business needs the same financial performance control and measurement capabilities as a large corporation, but in a solution that's affordable, easy...
- Transition from Spreadsheet Budgets to Packaged Application
- This white paper details the problems that go with spreadsheet-based budgeting as well as the advantages of packaged applications. It also proposes a...
- Better Cash Flow Management: Recession-Proof Your Business
- Cash is the lifeblood of most small to mid-sized organizations. So why rely on error-prone spreadsheets for forecasting cash flow and risk making...
- Centage/IOMA Budgeting Survey: Benchmarks and Issues
- How are other financial professionals dealing with the issues you face? This report offers you an inside peak into what the minds at...
- Is Your Database Ready For Your Company's Future?
- This brochure is targeted to executives and will cover all the business benefits of DB2. All Management and Careers White Papers
- Live Webcast
A Geek's Guide to Presenting to Business People - Live Webcast: Wednesday, June 20th at 1:00 PM EDT
Join this live webinar with Paul Glen, author of Leading Geeks, to learn how to... - Operational Analytics - Changing the Competitive Dynamics of the Business
- Date/Time: June 5, 2012, 11:00 a.m., EDT, 4:00 p.m. BST / 3:00 p.m. UTC
Please join us for this webcast, as Dr. Barry... - A Geek's Guide to Presenting to Business People
- Live Webcast: Wednesday, June 20th at 1:00 PM EDT
Join this live webinar with Paul Glen, author of Leading Geeks, to learn how to... - Shifting Application Dynamics Impact Performance Management
- Curtis Franklin, Contributing Editor at InformationWeek, interviews Alain Cohen, OPNET's President and CTO, regarding trends in application performance management (APM), how organizations are...
- Integrated IT Operations Management in the Cloud
- Join award-winning technology editor Stan Gibson and Andrew White, CMO at BMC, to learn how asset management and service management are converging and...
- Distributed Database Security with Real-time Monitoring
- View this demo and learn how IBM InfoSphere Guardium database activity monitoring can help protect your sensitive data in distributed DBMS environments with... All Management and Careers Webcasts
How does your salary compare with your peers? Find out using our Smart Salary Tool.