Idealab, the founding (&sole) venture investor in IBUY: "Venture Capitalists See Investors Grow               Mutinous
                By AMY CORTESE, New York TImes
                 In March, Battery Ventures, a leading                venture capital firm, held an annual               meeting in a Florida resort for its limited               partners, which include some of the biggest               pension funds and endowments. 
                A moment of levity came when Thomas J.               Crotty, a Battery executive, awarded a               trophy to a limited partner who had won a               golf tournament. As he presented the cup, a               cheap $100 job, Mr. Crotty said it showed               "just how desperate V.C.'s are to give               anything to a limited partner these days."
                The remark drew laughs, but it also reflected               the escalating tension between venture               capitalists and their investors. In the two               years since the Internet bubble burst,               venture investors have watched their lush               profits shrivel. Yet many venture capitalists               are still doing quite well for themselves               because of the large management fees they               collect from investors. Fees are based on               their funds' size, so as funds ballooned over               the last few years — about 40 have at least               $1 billion in capital — so have the fees.
                With typical fees at 2 to 3 percent of a fund,               a venture capital firm with a $1 billion fund               would collect $20 million to $30 million               annually from investors, even if only a small               amount of the fund has been invested — and               into money-losing companies at that.
                The incongruence is at the heart of a brewing investor rebellion. While limited               partners have little legal recourse, many are demanding more information and               pushing venture capitalists to make changes, like reducing the size of funds               and, therefore, the fees. At least five big firms have scaled back funds this               year.
                "Limited partners have gone from sullen to mutinous," said Howard               Anderson, the senior managing director of YankeeTek Ventures, a venture               capital firm in Cambridge, Mass. "What's driving them nuts is that the venture               partnerships do well in bad years. If rewards are shared, the pain should be               shared, too."
                Those tensions have boiled over at some of this season's annual meetings,               which began in February but hit full stride this month. They are the one time               when venture capitalists formally address all of their investors, and are usually               polite affairs where criticism, if any, is reserved. But with the bulk of meetings               still to come, venture capitalists are bracing for the worst.
                "The limited-partner community is scared, angry and in a mood to be more               challenging of their money managers," Mr. Crotty said. Although Battery's               performance is better than many, he said, "we weren't sure what kind of               audience we were going to face."
                Mr. Crotty's colleague, Anthony Abate, put it more colorfully: "We thought               they were going to storm the Bastille."
                Battery's meeting went better than its investment leaders had expected, they               said, partly because they spoke frankly and tried to answer all questions. But               meetings at some other firms have been strained.
                                The annual meeting of Redpoint Ventures of Menlo Park, Calif., was held in               February at a nearby hotel. People at the meeting said one investor stood up               and challenged the firm's capacity to invest its $1.25 billion fund prudently.               Redpoint partners offered their rationale but, according to one attendee, "the               dogs weren't eating the dog food." A month later, Redpoint reduced its fund               size by 25 percent.
                The most uncomfortable standoff may have been at the meeting of Idealab,               the technology incubator, held in March in Pasadena, Calif. The firm has               been sued by investors including Dell Computer and Moore Global               Investments, who have accused Bill Gross, its founder, of mismanagement.               Mr. Gross is fighting the suit. 
                The meeting was contentious from the start. Idealab insisted that a court               reporter, brought in by some aggrieved investors, leave the meeting. The firm               distributed rules of conduct for the meeting, stating that it could stop               discussions that exceeded two minutes, used derogatory references or               concerned confidential information related to the lawsuit.
                Presentations by Marcia Goodstein, who is the president and chief operating               officer and Mr. Gross's fiancée, and by a director, Robert Kavner, a former               executive vice president at AT&T, were among those prompting pointed               questions, according to two people who attended. Idealab said it invested               about $1 million a month but spent twice that much a month to operate its               fledgling companies. The largest operating expense, it disclosed, goes to               salary and benefits: Mr. Gross's compensation, including salary and bonus,               exceeded $750,000 in 2002, up from $250,000 in 2000. During that same               period, the plaintiffs charge, Idealab lost half their $1 billion investment.               Idealab says some of the money was invested in companies that are still               going concerns. Several investors walked out early.
                The mood is a far cry from that of the late 1990's, when the meetings were               more like lovefests and investors didn't care to hear the details because the               cash was flowing in. 
                "Limited partners are forcing the general partners to go back and rethink               whether they can invest their money within a reasonable amount of time,"               said Jonathan Axelrad, a lawyer at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, a law               firm that represents technology companies. "This is a unique set of               circumstances the venture industry has not faced before. People are casting               about for creative solutions."
                That partly explains the fund-cutting in the venture world. Some prominent               firms, like Mohr, Davidow Ventures and Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers,               have voluntarily reduced size and averted investor criticism. "If you see this               palace revolt coming, maybe you head it off and take some action," Mr.               Anderson of YankeeTek said. 
                The cuts have pressured other venture capitalists to trim funds or split them               up. Fund size is "an area of significant concern to limited partners, and               properly so," said Alan Austin, chief operating officer at Accel Partners,               which has proposed splitting its $1 billion fund into two. That would reduce               some management fees but still lock up investors' capital. It is unclear if               Accel investors, who voted on the change by mail, have approved it; results               will be tallied in time for annual meeting on April 25. If it is defeated, the               meeting "could be a real food fight," one investor said.
                Few regulations cover what venture capital firms must disclose, and the level               of information they provide to their investors varies widely. Some gloss over               details at their meetings, but that approach is not going over well this year.               To some extent, the funds are feeling the same pressures for openness that               has roiled the broader investing world since the collapse of Enron.
                Battery Ventures spent months preparing for its meeting, where it dissected               the firm's performance, good and bad. It detailed write-downs and write-offs               and went over a "watch list" of troubled investments. (Three were shut down,               three received more financing and one was sold for $350 million.) Battery               also told investors that the 2001 revenue of its 27 portfolio companies was               $275 million less than it had forecast.
                From an investor's point of view, such transparency is helpful in difficult               times.
                "We want as much information as possible," said Richard J. Hayes, a senior               investment officer at Calpers, the huge pension fund. "Most of our partners               are getting into the nitty-gritty details of their investments. That's what we               want." |