Nov
14

A $20 billion investment firm is betting big on Wall Street’s hottest tech stocks (NFLX)

Getty Images

Tiger Global Management has increased its holdings of tech giants including Netflix, Amazon, Alphabet and more. The positions are from a public document known as a 13F, which funds must file every quarter. 


Billionaire Chase Coleman's Tiger Global Management has increased its bets on some of Wall Street’s hottest tech stocks, according to documents filed Tuesday.

Among the fund’s $134.6 billion worth of holdings disclosed for third quarter of 2017 was a 711% increase in shares of Netflix — which now makes up $553.8 million of the fund’s portfolio.

According to the 13F, Tiger also made the following tech sector moves during last quarter, according to analysis by Bloomberg:

Increased its Amazon holdings by 24% to 1.54 million shares, worth $1.48 billionIncreased its Facebook holdings by 240% to 1.81 million shares, worth $308.8 millionIncreased its Alibaba holdings by 4.4% to 4.54 million shares, worth $783.5 millionSold off all its shares of Alphabet A and C shares, worth a combined $66.4 million.

The quarterly filing, called a 13F, lists the long stock positions of investment firms. The positions are current as of 45 days prior, so it is possible that Tiger Global has since changed its positions. 

Tiger Global Management invests in private and public markets and manages about $20 billion firmwide. The firm managed $5.9 billion in hedge fund assets as of mid-year 2016, according to the Hedge Fund Intelligence Billion Dollar Club ranking. 

Original author: Graham Rapier

Continue reading
  85 Hits
Nov
14

Startup Opportunities Available on Audible

November 14, 2017

The audiobook version of Startup Opportunities: Know When To Quit Your Day Job is now available on Audible.

Unlike the Audible version of Venture Deals, this one was read by Stephen Hoye.

If you like audiobooks, grab a copy, give it a listen, and tell me what you think.

Also published on Medium.

Previous Post Next Post
Original author: Brad Feld

Continue reading
  57 Hits
Nov
13

Bootstrapping to $10 Million: Gesture CEO Jim Alvarez (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Jim has bootstrapped a $10M company by providing a software solution to the charity auction management problem. Interesting journey. Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your journey....

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  92 Hits
Nov
13

Zebras Uniting at DazzleCon

November 13, 2017

Yesterday, I wrote about the upcoming CO Impact Days. In it, I pointed to a Medium post titled Zebras Fix What Unicorns Break, which turns out to be the Zebra Manifesto.

Per the manifesto, a Zebra (unlike Unicorns) are real:

Zebra companies are both black and white: they are profitable and improve society. They won’t sacrifice one for the other.Zebras are also mutualistic: by banding together in groups, they protect and preserve one another. Their individual input results in stronger collective output.Zebra companies are built with peerless stamina and capital efficiency, as long as conditions allow them to survive.

Yesterday afternoon, I got a text from Mara Zepeda, one of the founders of the Zebra Movement and authors of the manifesto, saying that we should talk. We had a great discussion where I learned more about Zebras, the Zebra Movement, and the upcoming DazzleCon Conference in Portland this week. Over 200 Zebra founders, funders and friends from around the world are gathering to co-create the community of companies that are building the goods and services we need for the society we want.

Mara also pointed me at the article Can “Zebras” Fix What “Unicorns” Break? on The Long Now Foundation website, one of the sponsors of DazzleCon along with the Rockefeller Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, the Knight Foundation, and several others.

Amy and I signed up to support the Zebra Movement and decided to also sponsor DazzleCon through our Anchor Point Foundation. I’m excited – and fascinated – with what Mara and her colleagues are doing as they extend the perspective and engagement around 21st century entrepreneurship well beyond Unicorns.

Also published on Medium.

Previous Post Next Post
Original author: Brad Feld

Continue reading
  75 Hits
Nov
13

What are Indian VCs Looking For with Naren Gupta, Nexus Ventures - Sramana Mitra

We continue our deep dive into the current seed investment eco-system and talking to our investor friends about what they’re looking for. Here, you can hear the perspective of Naren Gupta of Nexus...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  99 Hits
Nov
13

Elevate Credit Trying to Elevate - Sramana Mitra

According to the 2017 Americas Alternative Finance Industry Report, the alternative finance market across the US, Canada, Latin America, and the Caribbean has grown 23% to $35.2 billion in 2016. The...

___

Original author: MitraSramana

Continue reading
  112 Hits
Nov
13

Scaling to Profitability with $20 Million in Venture Capital: CloudShare CEO Zvi Guterman (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Zvi has built a $25M a year in profitable revenue with $20M in venture capital from Sequoia and other investors. Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your journey. Where are you from?...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  79 Hits
Nov
03

Thought Leaders in Artificial Intelligence: Cognitive Scale CEO Akshay Sabhiki (Part 5) - Sramana Mitra

This feature from The Register covers the highlights of the study on the root causes of highjacking email accounts presented at the Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS) held early...

___

Original author: jyotsna popuri

Continue reading
  125 Hits
Nov
12

Uber confirms SoftBank has agreed to invest billions

 The paperwork’s done! The long-anticipated SoftBank Group investment into Uber has been agreed upon, a spokesperson confirms to TechCrunch. We’ve been provided the following statement. “We’ve entered into an agreement with a consortium led by SoftBank and Dragoneer on a potential investment. We believe this agreement is a strong vote of confidence in Uber’s… Read More

Continue reading
  111 Hits
Nov
12

Building a Venture-Scale MarTech Company in Silicon Valley: Chaitanya Chandrasekhar, CEO of Quantic Mind (Part 7) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: What was your revenue in 2016 that you raised the $20 million against? Chaitanya Chandrasekhar: Over $10 million in annual recurring. Sramana Mitra: You mentioned something about...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  72 Hits
Nov
11

CO Impact Days: Unicorns, Zebras, Ponies, and Donkeys

VCs love to talk about Unicorns, where a giant return is possible. Some friends in the impact investing world have recently started talking about generating giant returns by investing in Zebras (such as a nonprofit building in rural Colorado) and Ponies (an immigrant restaurant in Seattle currently using payday lending at 35% for their working capital). While these returns have an economic component, they can also have dramatic impact on our society.

If you are interested in impact investing, I encourage you to join the Impact Finance Center (IFC) and presenting funders The Anschutz Foundation, Zoma Foundation, The MacArthur Foundation, Colorado Health Foundation, and Gary Community Investments at CO Impact Days 2017, Nov 15-17, in Denver, Colorado.

CO Impact Days is a three-day experiential executive education conference that teaches investors and philanthropists how to make their investments more effective and their philanthropy more efficient. It also will connect attendees to one hundred of the Rocky Mountains’ most exciting social ventures – projects, nonprofits, for profits, and funds.

CO Impact Days’ Founder Dr. Stephanie Gripne (recently written up in Forbes, Is This Wildlife Conservation PhD The Steve Jobs Of Impact Investing) points out that we need to stop bifurcating our philanthropy from our investing and start treating our philanthropy as an investment.

Gripne and a growing number of her colleagues are taking Emerson’s quote, “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds” to heart. They are working on figuring out a new investment model where we can start investing in the companies, nonprofits, projects, and funds that society needs.

Another voice in the movement is Ross Baird in his new book, The Innovation Blind Spot: Why We Back the Wrong Ideas―and What to Do About It. Ross makes a strong case that we are missing many of our innovations because of an outdated, obscure, misaligned investment model. According to Baird,

“While most communities across the US think in two pockets – the business and philanthropy communities don’t intersect – Colorado is leading the country in one-pocket thinkers. From the way we invest and support startups, to how employees can own and build wealth in companies, to how finance can be used to reshape traditionally philanthropic sectors such as the environment and early childhood education, Colorado is leading the way.”

An article by Jennifer Brandel, Mara Zepeda, Astrid Scholz & Aniyia Williams, Zebras Fix What Unicorns Break, introduces Zebras as an alternative to to Unicorns. And Gripne’s paper, Laying the Groundwork for the National Impact Investing Marketplace, makes the case that the reason we do not have $1B impact funds for nonprofits, immigrants, and women, is not because we do not have $50M of institutional quality of deal flow. Rather, it’s because there is no incentive to create the infrastructure to do the necessary capacity building to find and scale up these investments. Gripne and her team are also working on a new paper to be introduced at CO Impact Days, inspired by the Zebras article mentioned above, “If Angels Invest in Unicorns, do Heroes Invest in Zebras and What About Ponies and Donkeys?”

This conference is not just about Coloradans. CO Impact Days was designed to expand regionally and replicate to up to five other regions throughout the U.S. creating the National Impact Investing Marketplace. Indiana is bringing a cohort of ten community leaders, Washington is bringing five, and Maryland is bringing three. CO Impact Days is the first statewide marketplace for direct investing, and is just Phase 1 of the national model. Gripne and her team (which Andrew Currie, Kathy Merchant, who led Greater Cincinnati Foundation for 20 years and wrote the book on Community Foundations and Impact Investing, and Nicole Bagley, trustee on Arca Foundation, Brenn Foundation, and Sapelo Foundation) have their sights set on a national marketplace, and they want to invite you in on the ground floor.

Last year’s inaugural CO Impact Days led to over 20 impact investments from first-time, direct investors. They included Nicole Bagley’s investment in Silvernest (a tech platform that provides a matchmaking service for the aging population to find housemates and additional income, companionship, or help around the house) and the Kenneth King Foundation’s investment in Colorado Lending Source’s Main Street Character Loan Fund (providing up to $50K loans to Colorado for those of who have a good idea and good character), among others.

In addition to producing CO Impact Days, IFC is also rolling out a new tool, impact investing giving circles, to catalyze new investors and source Zebras, Ponies, and Donkeys. Impact investing giving circles will provide philanthropists and investors with a low-cost, low risk, first safe investment opportunity by using a donation in a pooled donor advised fund (to be hosted by a community foundation, thus supporting their work as well).

IFC plans to pilot these impact investing giving circles in Colorado in the areas of Conservation & Water, Women, Rural Community Investment. Its Food Impact Investing Giving Circle will be piloted in multiple cities including Chicago, Boston, and Denver, with Chef’s Collaborative and an Immigrant & Minority Impact Investing Giving Circle is being launched in Seattle in partnership with Ethnic Business Coalition to refinancing payday loans for restaurants.

To Get involved in CO Impact Days 2017

Register as an Investor: http://bit.ly/2vMVtFb

Register as Community Attendee: http://bit.ly/2gIgQSf

Volunteer to be a Social Venture Judge: http://bit.ly/2gN41tO

Donate to support CO Impact Days & Initiative: https://goo.gl/3282Tg

Join CO Impact Days & Initiative Mailing List: http://tinyurl.com/y76n29ma

Also published on Medium.

Previous Post Next Post
Original author: Brad Feld

Continue reading
  59 Hits
Nov
11

These are the US startups that Russian investors are backing

 A taxi-hailing app. A transplant device developer. An online mortgage provider. Those businesses may have little in common, but one shared thread is that U.S. startups in these sectors have all secured large funding rounds led by Russia-based investors. They’re not alone. Over the past seven years, Russia-based e investors have participated in more than 300 funding rounds for… Read More

Continue reading
  124 Hits
Nov
11

Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Tracy Metzger, COO of Vesta (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Tracy Metzger: There is a need today to go out and find a consolidated way to leverage all of these different great technologies that are bespoke in their way of implementation. There is a need to...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  130 Hits
Nov
11

Building a Venture-Scale MarTech Company in Silicon Valley: Chaitanya Chandrasekhar, CEO of Quantic Mind (Part 6) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: One question, when you raised the $12 million, what were the metrics? How many customers did you have? Chaitanya Chandrasekhar: Starting the year 2014, we had zero revenue. Because of...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  38 Hits
Nov
10

Uber ‘Express POOL’ offers the cheapest fare if you’ll walk a little

 Uber’s found a way to shave another 25 percent or so off the price of a ride. Uber Express POOL asks you to walk up to a few blocks to your pickup and destination before and after the ride in exchange for the cheapest fare out of all of Uber’s options. Read More

Continue reading
  113 Hits
Nov
10

Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Tracy Metzger, COO of Vesta (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Tracy Metzger: Vesta processes anywhere from 300,000 to 500,000 transactions a day and up towards $18 billion in payments a year. We carry elements like their mobile devices and desktop devices. We...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  46 Hits
Nov
10

November 16 – 375th 1Mby1M Mentoring Roundtable for Entrepreneurs - Sramana Mitra

Entrepreneurs are invited to the 375th FREE online 1Mby1M mentoring roundtable on Thursday, November 16, 2017, at 8 a.m. PST/11 a.m. EST/9:30 p.m. India IST. If you are a serious entrepreneur,...

___

Original author: Maureen Kelly

Continue reading
  45 Hits
Nov
10

375th Roundtable Recording On November 9, 2017: With Vinny Lingham, Newtown Partners - Sramana Mitra

In case you missed it, you can listen to the recording here:

___

Original author: Maureen Kelly

Continue reading
  57 Hits
Nov
10

Tableau Fails to Deliver Growth - Sramana Mitra

Gartner estimates the global business intelligence and analytics market to be worth $18.3 billion this year. The market is expected to grow 7.6% annually over the next two years to become a $22.8...

___

Original author: MitraSramana

Continue reading
  64 Hits
Nov
10

Huge media companies like CBS and ESPN are banding together to fight Google and Facebook — but it may not be enough

Fox

Big media companies are working together to sell digital ads to better battle Google and Facebook The TrustX initiative, which includes buy-in from the likes of CBS, News Corp., Conde Nast and Vox Media, is ramping its capabilities while promising marketers a safe harbor for their ads Yet TrustX faces potential challenges, including competing agendas and fickle ad buyers


A host of big media companies have come to a difficult realization — the enemy of the digital duopoly may be my new best friend.

The duopoly, of course, is Facebook and Google, and, to battle its growing dominance in digital advertising, media players ranging from CBS, to ESPN to Hearst and News Corp. are pooling together their ad space. The vision is to create a centralized digital outlet where ad buyers can find the best, safest, places to run their ads outside of the Google and Facebook domain.

Whether the combined power of a slew of old-media players can help win back more ad budgets is an unanswered question at this point. An even thornier question is whether these blood rivals have the will and wherewithal to work together and make sure this plan bears actual fruit. Given the rocky history of similar digital alliances  – it won't be easy.

The initiative is called TrustX. It's a non-profit group established by the trade group Digital Content Next, whose members include NBCUniversal, Viacom, Vox Media and The Washington Post.

The big idea is to create a digital ad marketplace where only A-list publishers sell ads using automated software. 

The pitch to marketers is that with all the recent swirl over ads ending up in bad places online (next to fake news, hate videos or in front of bots), they'll be able to run their ads on only top quality sites, and these ads will only be shown to real people. And for participating publishers, the hope is that they'll be able to take more direct control of ad inventory and not have to share as much of their revenue with ad tech middlemen. That's a common complaint in the digital ad world– where ad space can be bought and sold via a daisy chain of numerous digital exchanges.

Announced in September of 2016, TrustX has moved at a careful pace, deliberately, say its leaders. The group rolled out a beta push this past summer with a handful of publishers supplying ad space.

Since August the number of publishers selling ads via the platform has doubled, and the number of actual ads changing hands has accelerated exponentially.

"We've seen more than hockey stick growth," said TrustX CEO David Kohl, who cautioned that it's still very early in the rollout. Kohl expects to have 20 publishers up and running by the end of the year. 

TrustX CEO David Kohl TrustX

"This process has been driven by a foundational principle, that you don’t put something into the market until you know it really works," Kohl said.

" If you think about the idea that p rogrammatic advertising was built over the last decade, and it t ook years and years for all of its problems like fraud to creep in, where you now have this  trust problem. So we are realists.  Undoing that is not fast."

True. But every day that Google and Facebook pull larger portions of ad budgets, the urgency to act only increases.

DCN CEO Jason Kint, who led  the formation of TrustX, has been vocal about the growing power of the duopoly – noting that even as digital advertising grows, fewer budgets are finding their way to top publishers:

 

"This has to happen, and I'm bullish on the prospect," said Mike Smith, senior vice president, revenue, platforms and operations at Hearst Magazines Digital Media. "We all need to leverage against the duopoly, But there is a lot of groundwork to lay."

In August, the Association of National Advertisers, whose members include marketers like Nike, Bank of America and Ford, pledged to spend a combined $50 million in ad spending as part of a TrustX pilot program, reported Ad Age.

Indeed, it helps that marketers are generally bought into the idea that digital advertising needs to clean up its act. 

But as Smith noted, it's crucial for TrustX is making sure its software is integrated with the ad tech used by ad buyers and ad sellers. On that front, this past week TrustX has formed a partnership with the Trade Desk, an ad-buying tech company used by many big ad agencies. TrustX is also compatible with Google's popular ad buying software DoubleClick Bid Manager.

Still, the effort faces a slew of not insignificant challenges, say digital ad industry insiders:

Simply wrangling the competing needs of a consortium of companies with differing agendas is hard. History is not on TrustX's side here. There is a long list of previous ad consortiums – with names such as quadrant One, Brand.net, Yahoo Newspaper alliance, and Pangea – that struggled to gain traction. TrustX should theoretically command higher ad prices. Yet skeptical ad buyers may be happy to pay cheaper prices elsewhere, even if that means running ads on lower quality sites. Most publishers are still hedging their bets by continuing to sell ads via other programmatic channels ("nobody's turned off the spigot yet," said one media exec) General inertia in ad tech A lack of awareness in the market (several ad buyers and ad tech companies told Business Insider they didn't know what TrustX was)

"We totally understand that thinking," says Kohl. Before TrustX launched, his team consulted with leaders of previous digital ad sales alliances to assess the challenges, he said. 

TrustX has lined up lots of big names TrustX

One key takeaway from those conversations: TrustX's leadership and power is centralized, and it's not a profit driven entity. It's a lot easier to get things done when you don't have to get consensus from dozens of members and you're not driven by short-term revenue thinking, Kohl explained. 

"Before we launched, we really tried to minimize the risk," he said. "We've really, really done our homework."

Original author: Mike Shields

Continue reading
  127 Hits