To: Danny who wrote (70 ) 4/12/2001 5:21:14 PM From: Glenn Petersen Respond to of 136 Dan, you have some company:news.cnet.com Andreessen may have boosted Loudcloud IPO By Bloomberg News April 12, 2001, 12:30 p.m. PTnews.cnet.com WASHINGTON--Internet pioneer Marc Andreessen and two other high-profile investors bought shares last month in Loudcloud, possibly providing a boost to the company's initial public offering. Loudcloud, a provider of Internet-infrastructure services co-founded by Andreessen, held its first-time stock sale March 9. The IPO received considerable attention, in part because of its high-profile backers and in part because underwriters lowered the offering price to $6 a share after estimating the stock would sell for as much as $12 a share. Andreessen, Loudcloud director Michael Ovitz, and a Benchmark Capital Management fund reported in Securities and Exchange Commission filings that they bought a total of 1.3 million common shares on the day of the IPO at the $6 price. That equaled more than 5 percent of the 25 million shares Loudcloud offered to investors. The purchases may signal that Andreessen, who co-founded Netscape Communications, thought the IPO price was a bargain. Conversely, underwriters for the IPO may have turned to insiders such as Andreessen if they were having trouble interesting outside investors. Andreessen, Loudcloud's chairman, filed a Form 4 with the SEC disclosing the purchase of 500,000 shares on March 9 at $6 each. Marlena Fernandez, a Loudcloud spokeswoman, said Andreessen doesn't comment on his financial affairs. Ovitz, the co-founder of Creative Artists Agency who also was a former president of Walt Disney, bought 100,000 shares that day at the same price, according to SEC filings. And Benchmark Capital, the venture fund that helped Andreessen establish Loudcloud, bought 695,000 shares that day at $6 each. Earlier purchases Andreessen and Benchmark already had purchased millions of Loudcloud shares before the IPO at much lower prices. Andreessen, for example, bought 6.13 million common shares at 33 cents each, according to a registration statement for the IPO. Benchmark bought 8.9 million Loudcloud Series B preferred shares, which the company sold for as little as $1.68 each. Benchmark officials couldn't be reached for comment. Loudcloud was one of the first Web-related businesses to brave an IPO this year. The market for new stocks, particularly technology companies, effectively shut down after the Nasdaq composite index plunged 39 percent in 2000. Company shares have bounced around since the IPO, trading as high as $6.56 on the day of the stock sale and as low as $3.88 a week later.