| | | On the eve of Lyft's IPO, Twitter lit up with investors lamenting their failure to invest during the early days of the ride-hailing company. | Pear VC's Pejman Nozad tweeted: "The night before the IPO of a company that you passed on to seed, is the night you become a man! 😂First Facebook and now Lyft for me." | | . | | . | | Upfront Ventures' Mark Suster followed up on March 30 with: "That time 10 years ago @rajatsuri told me I had to check out ZimRide (aka @lyft). I did. I didn't understand why helping people share rides from Palo Alto to SF was a big idea. I was very wrong. Congrats to everybody who believed. You deserve your successes." | So I asked Term Sheet readers to share their biggest investment regrets. Below is a selection of your most cringe-worthy missed deals: | John Borthwick, CEO and founder of Betaworks Miss: Snap (IPOed in 2017) | SNAP. I got an introduction to Evan Spiegel after SnapChat launched and didn't take the meeting because what I saw was a sexting app. Short sighted … I suspect if I had met him I would have realized it wasn't that. | Alex Ferrara, partner at Bessemer Venture Partners Miss: Zoom (valued at $1 billion; filed to IPO) | I unfortunately missed investing in an early round at Zoom. I'd originally met [CEO] Eric Yuan while researching next-gen video conferencing solutions and it quickly became clear to me that they had the best team, tech and product in the market but they were still a very small company. He was kind enough to offer me a chance to invest in an early round (Series B or C?). It was a tough call but I was overly concerned about how crowded the market was at the time. There must have been a dozen competing startups as well as several well entrenched incumbent vendors. It's unfortunately one destined for our anti-portfolio! | Hadley Harris, founding general partner at Eniac Ventures Miss: Pinterest (valued at $12 billion; filed to IPO) | Back in 2010, Eniac was primarily focused on mobile-first seed stage companies, and when we looked at Pinterest, Ben had no plans for a mobile offering so we passed in the following email: | [Email from Hadley Harris to Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann on Nov. 9, 2010]: "Hi Ben, Thanks for walking me through the opportunity yesterday. I gave it some more thought and I think you're just too far outside our wheelhouse in terms of focus and stage for us to participate. Best of luck!" | We've celebrated all their success over the years and are excited about their impending IPO. | Kal Vepuri, founder & chairman at Brainchild Holdings Misses: Uber (valued at $70+ billion; filed to IPO); Pinterest (valued at $12 billion; filed to IPO) | In the seed round, I missed: | Uber: I saw a note from [investor] Naval Ravikant and tried the service but didn't take a meeting. | Pinterest: Spent half a day with Ben [Silbermann] / Paul [Sciarra] / Yash Nelapati (Pinterest's first engineer) at their condo/office and had a few follow-up discussions. User numbers were early but engagement was high. I won't make that mistake again. | I ended up participating later at (much) higher valuations. | John Vrionis, partner at Unusual Ventures Misses: Snowflake (valued at $3.5 billion); GitHub (acq. by Microsoft for $7.5 billion) | Snowflake - I had trouble seeing how a company could run on Amazon and beat Amazon at one of their core offerings. Totally wrong on that one! | GitHub - Loved the idea, the team and the traction but just felt the valuation at the time was priced beyond perfection. Oops. | Blake Modersitzki, managing partner at Pelion Venture Partners Miss: Omniture (IPO'ed in 2006; acquired by Adobe in 2009 for $1.8 billion) | I could have owned 30% of Omniture for $3 million and passed. Omniture was a company that evolved out of a predecessor company called MyComputer.com. We had looked at MyComputer which was technology that allowed users to build websites. We passed on MyComputer and did not fully appreciate the very early web analytics that Omniture was building. Post-the Omniture IPO the co-founders — Josh James and John Pestana — went on to start additional companies. Pelion was an investor in DOMO (now a public company) which was founded by Josh James. Pelion is an investor in ObservePoint, which was founded by John Pestana. | ... And two Term Sheet readers who wanted to stay anonymous: | Frank: 1) Uber: "What is the entire taxi business in San Francisco worth anyway?" | 2) Airbnb: "You think my wife would let a perfect stranger rent our basement apartment for a one night stand?" | 3) Netflix: After the IPO and the dotcom bust, when Netflix was trading at .64 cents (today it is $355), I said, "This company is toast, let's move on." | Dave: You'll probably get comments from brand name VCs, but you won't get comments from a little guy like me, investing on some of the crowdfunding platforms. Although Coindesk hasn't had an exit yet, the valuation is still currently in the billions. I had an opportunity to invest in it on the FundersClub crowdfunding platform, in the angel round, and I passed. Biggest miss for me — BY FAR. | --- | WEEKEND READ: A Term Sheet reader sent me the following article and said, "I have never, ever read an article like the one I received from Institutional Investor this morning. My group read it out loud this morning at our weekly meeting. The shock kept all of us quiet." I mean, if that doesn't make you click, I don't know what will. | The article, titled "When Buyout Firms Step In, Watch Out," is about private equity firms demanding aggressive terms that may help protect their interest in companies at the expense of lenders funding their deals. Debt investors are accepting fewer covenants based partly on the narrative that they too will benefit from increased flexibility for private equity owners. Covenant-lite loans, which lack safeguards protecting lenders, have surged since the 2008 financial crisis. A record 89% of institutional loans issued last year by private equity-backed borrowers were covenant-lite, a portion that has soared from 6% in 2010. | "Where covenant-lite, or the lack of covenants, will really hurt is in the potential recoveries if we go into a default cycle," said Craig Manchuck, a bond fund manager at Osterweis Capital Management. "Going into bankruptcy sooner often preserves that value for the estate." | Read the full story here. | | . | | | | | | • Kurly Inc, a Korean provider of an online grocery service, raised $88 million in Series D funding. Global Venture Partners led the round. • Tonal, a San Francisco-based intelligent fitness system, raised $45 million in Series C funding. L Catterton led the round. • HealthVerity Inc, a developer of software tools for the management of healthcare and consumer data, raised $25 million in Series C funding. Foresite Capital led the round, and was joined by investors including Flare Capital Partners and Greycroft Partners. • Intelligent Fiber Network, an Indiana-based commercial fiber broadband provider, raised nearly $13 million in funding. Investors include Wabash Valley Power. • Mighty Networks, a Palo Alto, Calif.-based software-as-a-service platform for brands and businesses, raised $11 million in Series A financing. Intel Capital and Sierra Wasatch led the round. • Teridion, a San Francisco-based provider of a public cloud-based WAN service backed by a carrier grade SLA, raised $9 million in funding. Jerusalem Venture Partners led the round, and was joined by investors including Magma Ventures and SingTel Innov8. • Kudi, a Nigeria-based financial services provider, raised $5 million in funding. Partech led the round, and was joined by investors including Michael Seibel, Khosla Ventures and YC. • Transcend, a data privacy company, raised $3.95 million in seed funding. Accel led the round. • Giblib, a Los Angeles-based streaming media platform offering on-demand medical lectures and surgical videos, raised $2.5 million in seed funding. Investors include Mayo Clinic, Venture Reality Fund, Wavemaker 360, USC Marshall Venture Fund and Michelson 20MM. • RE Botanicals, a hemp CBD brand, raised $2 million in funding. BIGR Ventures led the round. • CareMonkey, a company that helps schools streamline their paper workflow processes with a digital forms platform, raised $1.5 million in seed funding. Investors include Peter Bencivenga, New Ground Ventures and Rethink Education. • Bonusly, an employee recognition and rewards platform, raised $1.5 million in funding. Investors include FirstMark Capital and Bloomberg Beta. • Artisan Ice Cream, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based ice cream brand, raised funding of an undisclosed amount of funding. The investor was Blue Scorpion Investments. | . | | | | | HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES DEALS | | • Dyne Therapeutics, a Cambridge, Mass.-based biotechnology company, raised $50 million in Series A funding. Investors include Atlas Venture, Forbion and MPM Capital. • Inscripta, a Boulder, Colo.-based gene editing startup, raised $20 million in funding. The investors include Venrock, Foresite, Merieux Developpement, Paladin Capital Group, MLS Capital and NanoDimension. • Inanovate Inc., a South Dakota and North Carolina-based developer of blood tests for cancer and autoimmune diseases, raised $3.1 million in Series C funding. South Dakota Equity Partners led the round. | . | | | | • Eurazeo invested $40 million in Q Mixers, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based carbonated mixer brand. • Arlington Capital Partners made an investment in Octo Consulting Group Inc, a Reston, Va.-based provider of tech solutions for federal agencies. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Highview Capital acquired Frontier Fire Protection, a Denver, Colo.-based provider of fire and life safety solutions in the U.S. Mountain West and Southwest regions. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Broadway Technology, a portfolio company of Long Ridge Equity Partners, acquired Barracuda FX, a provider of FX order management technology. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • CFGI, which is backed by The Carlyle Group, acquired Pine Hill Group, a Philadelphia and Princeton, N.J.-based accounting and transaction advisory firm. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Wellspring Capital Management acquired Lucky Strike Entertainment LLC, a Sherman Oaks, Calif.-based operator of upscale entertainment venues. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • PumpMan Holdings LLC, a portfolio company of Soundcore Capital Partners, acquired ABC Electric Corp, a New York-based provider of field services such as motor rewind, pump repair, and electro-mechanical troubleshooting. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Access, which is backed by Berkshire Partners, acquired Montana & Associates, a provider of information governance consulting. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • AED-SICAD, which is backed by Battery Ventures, acquired Geocom Group, a provider of GIS technology for markets including utilities, transport and logistics. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Center Rock Capital Partners, LP acquired The Merit Distribution Group, a distributor of paint sundries, flooring products, and related installation supplies. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Sentrics, a portfolio company of Periscope Equity, acquired SeniorTV, an Akron, Ohio-based provider of television and entertainment for senior living communities. Financial terms weren't disclosed. • Encore Consumer Capital and CircleUp Growth Partners made an investment in 4505 Meats, a San Francisco-based operator of barbecue joints. Financial terms weren't disclosed. | . | | | | • Lonely Planet has acquired TRILL Travel, an artificial intelligence-driven travel marketplace that turns Instagram posts into bookable experiences. Financial terms weren't disclosed. | . | | | | • Poshmark, is planning an IPO this fall, the WSJ reports citing sources. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have been hired to lead the deal. Read more. | . | | | | • Edison Partners sold Kemp Technologies, a New York-based provider of load balancer and application delivery controller solutions and services, to Mill Point Capital. Financial terms weren't disclosed. | . | | | | • HealthQuest Capital, a growth capital firm, raised $440 million for its third fund, HealthQuest Partners III, L.P. • New Era Capital Partners, an Israel-based venture capital firm, raised $60 million for its new fund. • Torch Capital, a brand-focused investment firm, raised $60 million for its seed-focused fund. • Okta (Nasdaq: OKTA) raised $50 million for its venture investment fund, Okta Ventures. • Acacia Partners, an Austin, Texas-based private investment firm, raised funding of an undisclosed amount for its new fund. | . | | | | | | | | | This message has been sent to you because you are currently subscribed to Term Sheet Unsubscribe here
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