Click here to VIEW in your browser the NEW 2023 - 2024 Training Calendar

Click here to DOWNLOAD to your computer the NEW 2023 - 2024 Training Calendar

    IPOs, acquisitions of venture-backed companies fizzled in 2012
  • 02Jan

    (Reuters) - Venture-backed companies made less cash for their backers last quarter compared with a year ago, capping a year in which the industry came under fire for not delivering hoped-for returns.


    Acquisitions of venture-backed companies totaled $3.52 billion in the fourth quarter, down 29 percent from $4.99 billion a year earlier, according to data from Thomson Reuters and the National Venture Capital Association.

    For the full year, acquisitions totaled $21.5 billion, down 11 percent from $24.09 billion in 2011. The numbers reflect only companies that disclosed deal values.

    Venture-backed companies tapping public markets raised $1.41 billion via initial public offerings in the fourth quarter, down 50 percent from $2.8 billion a year earlier, when gaming company Zynga (ZNGA.O) raised $1 billion in its IPO.

    For the full year, venture-backed IPOs totaled $21.45 billion, doubling from $10.69 billion in 2011. But strip away the $16 billion that social-networking company Facebook (FB.O) raised in May and the total actually halved.

    The numbers highlight a system that relies on the success of just a handful of high-profile companies. Meanwhile, the vast majority of venture-backed companies delivered fairly moderate returns.

    Eight venture-backed companies held IPOs last quarter, compared with 11 a year earlier. About 95 companies were acquired, compared with 122 a year earlier.

    The biggest acquisition of the quarter was Cisco Systems' (CSCO.O) $1.2 billion purchase of wireless-networks company Meraki. The largest IPO of the quarter was human-resources softwarecompany Workday (WDAY.N), which raised $733 million.

    The venture industry has been targeted by criticism that the returns it offers do not justify the years - typically a decade or more - it requires investors to tie up their cash.

    In May, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation released a widely read report on venture investingcalled "We Have Met the Enemy... And He is Us." It slammed the industry for poor returns and business practices, particularly funds that total $500 million or more.

    (Reporting by Sarah McBride; Editing by Dan Grebler)

    Carver PA Corporations
    The Carver news team is determined to keep you up to date with the latest business news from all around
    the world. Carver PA Corporation is a multi-disciplinary company which provides a number of Industrial
    Training
    programs, Consulting Services and Recruitment Services on a global scale.