ISLD mentioned in nice company (WITC, etc.)
VCs continue to break Internet investment records
By Georgie Raik-Allen Red Herring Online May 12, 1999
Five Internet companies raised more than $50 million each in the first quarter of 1999, establishing another record-breaking quarter for venture capital investment in private Internet businesses.
Wit Capital raised $72 million, Juno Online Services raised $65 million, NorthPoint Communications raised $63.6 million, LookSmart raised $60 million, and Digital Island raised $50 million.
According to statistics released by venture capital research firm VentureOne, those five Internet companies topped the list of all venture deals for the quarter. However, those record-breaking investments have already been overshadowed by Zefer, a Boston-based Internet services startup that just raised $100 million from Chicago-based investment firm GTCR Golder Rauner.
Total venture investment in Internet companies reached a new height of $2.1 billion in the first quarter of 1999, representing 58 percent of the quarter's total venture investments and an increase from $1.6 billion in Internet investing in the fourth quarter of 1998. In the usually slow quarter, a record $3.6 billion venture dollars was invested overall in private companies, a 31.8 percent increase over the first quarter 1998 and a 10.5 percent increase from the fourth quarter 1998.
"The extraordinary volume of Internet investments has made a normally slow quarter into a record-breaker," says Dave Witherow, CEO of VentureOne.
BIG DEALS Most of the increase in dollars is attributable to a trend of ballooning deal size rather than number of deals closed. In the first quarter of this year, venture capitalists inked 464 deals, representing an increase of just 2.2 percent over the fourth quarter 1999.
Information technology startups accounted for 62.7 percent of deals, health care 17.3 percent, and products and services companies 17.2 percent.
According to Jean Yaremchuk, vice president of research and technology at VentureOne, the amount of venture capital dollars going to health care is dropping, with startups in that sector having to look elsewhere for financing.
BIG EXITS While 22 companies went public last quarter, raising $1.5 billion on the markets, 36 companies merged or were acquired for a total value of $5.5 billion.
The five biggest venture-backed IPOs for the first quarter were Priceline.com (Nasdaq: PCLN), which raised $160 million; Covad Communications (Nasdaq: COVD), which raised $140 million; Critical Path
(Nasdaq: CPTH), which raised $108 million; Packaged Ice (Nasdaq: ICED), which raised $91 million; and iVillage (Nasdaq: IVIL), which raked in more than $87 million.
The largest venture-backed merger and acquisition deals were WNP Communications, acquired by Nextlink Communications (Nasdaq: NXLK) for $695 million; Lightera Networks, acquired by Ciena (Nasdaq: CIEN) for $552 million; Omnia Communications, also acquired by Ciena, for $429 million; Assured Access Technology, acquired by Alcatel (NYSE: ALA) for $350 million; and Sqribe, acquired by Brio Technology (Nasdaq: BRYO) for $311 million.
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