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BA.net feedsburner VentureCapital News 01/07/2008

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Venture Capital

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Venture Capital bloggers have a uniquely targeted audience of entrepreneurs interested in what they have to say. These Venture Capitalists write about technology, entrepreneurship, investing, the computer industry, and their random exploits.

en-usFeedBurner Networks http://www.feedburner.comTue, 01 Jul 2008 00:14:00 -0500442092http://www.feedburner.comThis is the spliced feed for "Venture Capital". Add this to your news reader to receive updates about the network.

Quantum Bond [Venture Chronicles]

read moreUncategorizedJeffTue, 01 Jul 2008 00:14:00 -0500

Being a classic 007 junkie, I never thought I’d say this but the new Bond movies are the best of the entire 40 year series.


Being a classic 007 junkie, I never thought I’d say this but the new Bond movies are the best of the entire 40 year series.

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Adobe Teams Up With Google, Yahoo To Index More Flash Content For Search [Silicon Alley Insider]

read moreADBEGOOGMSFTYHOODan FrommerMon, 30 Jun 2008 23:30:00 -0500

adobe-logo-white-big.jpgAdobe (ADBE) will make it easier for search engines to index more content in applications built with its Flash software. Previously, Google and Yahoo could index text and links in Flash animations and applications. Now, with some "optimized Adobe Flash Player technology," they'll be able to "uncover information" in Flash files "that is currently undiscoverable by search engines."

This is good news for searchers, who might be able to find more stuff that they're looking for. And it's potentially good news for publishers who use dynamic Flash applications: More of their content could be indexed on Google (GOOG) or Yahoo (YHOO) than before, which could increase traffic. It's also a smart move for Adobe, which is going to see more competition from other Internet application platforms/frameworks -- and must give companies every possible reason to keep using Flash.

Why isn't Microsoft (MSFT) getting a helping hand? We don't know the official answer, but we bet it has to do with Silverlight, the would-be Flash killer that's brewing in Redmond.

See Also:
Adobe Flash Coming To Apple's iPhone -- Maybe, Someday
Adobe Q2 Beats Street, Q3 Revenue Guidance A Bit Weak
Adobe CEO Narayen's Six-Month Review: Thumbs Up

ZymoGenetics Takes on First Debt. Deerfield Bets Recothrom Will Pay Dividends [Xconomy Venture Capital Feed]

read moreNational blog mainSeattleSeattle blog mainBiotechdealsHedge FundsLife SciencesDoug WilliamsDeerfieldPacific Growth EquitiesGreg WadeThrombin-JMIKing PharmaceuticalsLuke TimmermanMon, 30 Jun 2008 23:05:42 -0500 Luke Timmerman wrote:

ZymoGenetics is growing up. For the first time, the Seattle-based biotech company has raised capital by borrowing it, instead of following the usual industry playbook—getting it by selling more equity shares to investors.

The latter technique, which creates more supply of available shares and therefore dilutes the value of existing ones, would certainly have raised a ruckus with ZymoGenetics shareholders. The stock (NASDAQ: ZGEN) closed yesterday at $8.42 a share, and has fallen 44 percent from its 52-week high. Another equity sale would’ve likely driven it down more.

“We clearly didn’t want to do that,” said ZymoGenetics president Doug Williams, in an interview. “We feel that Recothrom is going to be a successful product, and because we are a maturing drug company with a marketed product, we can now take on debt as an instrument to fund the company.”

The company said yesterday it agreed to borrow as much as $100 million from Deerfield Management, a leading biotech hedge fund and one of its largest shareholders. It gives ZymoGenetics the flexibility, as Williams puts it, to make strategic withdrawals in $25 million chunks to boost sales of Recothrom, the company’s new drug for surgical bleeding. In exchange, Deerfield gets a 2 percent royalty on sales for every $25 million loan it provides. The company will also have to pay back the borrowed money by June 2013, plus 4.9 percent interest.

ZymoGenetics said earlier this year it would do something to slow the bleeding on its own income statement. The company reported a net loss of $41 million in the first quarter, and had $155 million in cash and investments left at the end of March. To reduce expenses, it cut more than 80 jobs, leaving a payroll of 535 workers. It is also dropping hints about possible partnerships in the works that could bring in new cash.

Without a proven stream of cash flowing in yet from its new product, Deerfield’s bet matters, said Greg Wade, an analyst with Pacific Growth Equities in San Francisco. Recothrom, approved by the FDA in January, still has to pass muster with hospital purchasing committees. That bureaucratic process can take months before the company gets a more specific read on the drug’s sales potential, Williams says. Meanwhile, ZymoGenetics and its partner Bayer have to convince hospitals they should quit using a cheaper competitor, Thrombin-JMI, derived from cow blood and start using the genetically engineered product from ZymoGenetics.

“Deerfield is a highly respected institutional investor, and it speaks to their confidence in ZymoGenetics’ management and product that they’ll put this much money at risk,” says Wade, who owns shares in ZymoGenetics. He added that ZymoGenetics chose the “optimal” way to get capital at a low borrowing cost, while minimizing the dilution of existing shares.

Wade expects Recothrom to generate $23.7 million in sales in 2008, its first year, and $70.9 million in sales next year. That puts Wade in the middle of analyst forecasts for Recothrom sales, which vary from $13 million to $35 million for 2008, said Susan Specht, a company spokeswoman.

It’s still too early to say whether ZymoGenetics can get to the ultimate measure of success for a maturing company: the P-word (profitability). Chief Financial Officer Jim Johnson used the word on a conference call with analysts yesterday, saying it is the company’s goal “in the next few years.” It’s possible that Recothrom sales could push the company into the black, he says, although he didn’t go so far as to predict that one drug alone will do the trick.


UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS

ZymoGenetics is growing up. For the first time, the Seattle-based biotech company has raised capital by borrowing it, instead of following the usual industry playbook—getting it by selling more equity shares to investors. The latter technique, which creates more supply of available shares and therefore dilutes the value of existing ones, would certainly have raised a [...]

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Who’s Afraid of an IPO? Everybody, At the Moment [Xconomy Venture Capital Feed]

read moreBoston blog mainNationalNational blog mainSeattle blog mainVCIPOsstartupsventureinvestmentinitial public offeringsM&AMergersacquisitionsVenture CapitalNVCANational Venture Capital AssociationMark HeesenMichael GreeleyFlybridge Capital PartnersFlybridgefundingcapitalstockIPOWade RoushMon, 30 Jun 2008 23:01:40 -0500 Briefcase Head Wade Roush wrote:

There are two main doors that a venture-backed company can go through to provide a payday for its early investors: go public, or get acquired. And for the time being, the first door has slammed shut. In the second quarter of 2008, which ended yesterday, there were no initial public offerings by venture-backed companies in the United States. Zero.

It’s the first time since 1978 that U.S. IPO activity has come to a complete halt, according to the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). The first quarter wasn’t much better, with only five IPOs by venture-backed companies. In 2007, by contrast, there were 86 (18 in Q1, 25 in Q2, 12 in Q3, and 31 in Q4). In a report issued today in cooperation with financial news organization Thomson Reuters, the NVCA calls the situation “concerning enough to be characterized as a capital markets crisis for the start-up community.”

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