get some different and interesting ideas about the startup......
AS MORE TECH START-UPS STAY
PRIVATE, SO DOES THE MONEY
Not long ago, if you were a young, brash
technologist with a world-conquering start-up idea, there was a good chance you
spent much of your waking life working toward a single business milestone: taking
your company public. Though luminaries of the tech industry have always
expressed skepticism and even hostility toward the finance industry, tech’s
dirty secret was that it looked to Wall Street and the ritual of a public
offering for affirmation — not to mention wealth. But something strange has
happened in the last couple of years: The initial public offering of stock has
become déclassé. For start-up entrepreneurs and their employees across Silicon
Valley, an initial public offering is no longer a main goal. Instead, many
founders talk about going public as a necessary evil to be postponed as long as
possible because it comes with more problems than benefits. “If you can get
$200 million from private sources, then yeah, I don’t want my company under the
scrutiny of the unwashed masses who don’t understand my business,” said
Danielle Morrill, the chief executive of Mattermark, a start-up that organizes
and sells information about the start-up market. “That’s actually terrifying to
me. Silicon Valley’s sudden distaste for the I.P.O. — rooted in part in Wall
Street’s skepticism of new tech stocks — may be the single most important
psychological shift underlying the current tech boom. Staying private affords
start-up executives the luxury of not worrying what outsiders think and helps
them avoid the quarterly earnings treadmill. It also means Wall Street is doing
what it failed to do in the last tech boom: using traditional metrics like
growth and profitability to price companies. Investors have been tough on
Twitter, for example, because its user growth has slowed. They have been tough
on Box, the cloud-storage company that went public last year, because it
remains unprofitable. And the e-commerce company Zulily, which went public last
year, was likewise punished when it cut its guidance for future sales.
Scott Kupor, the
managing partner at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, and his
colleagues said in a recent report that despite all the attention start-ups
have received in recent years, tech stocks are not seeing unusually high
valuations. In fact, their share of the overall market has remained stable for
14 years, and far off the peak of the late 1990s.That unwillingness to cut much
slack to young tech companies limits risk for regular investors. If the bubble
pops, the unwashed masses, if that’s what we are, aren’t as likely to get
washed out. Private investors, on the other hand, are making big bets on
so-called unicorns — the Silicon Valley jargon for start-up companies valued at
more than a billion dollars. If many of those unicorns flop, most Americans
will escape unharmed, because losses will be confined to venture capitalists
and hedge funds that have begun to buy into tech start-ups, as well as tech
founders and their employees.The reluctance — and sometimes inability — to go
public is spurring the unicorns. By relying on private investors for a longer
period of time, start-ups get more runway to figure out sustainable business
models. To delay their entrance into the public markets, firms like Airbnb,
Dropbox, Palantir, Pinterest, Uber and several other large start-ups are
raising hundreds of millions, and in some cases billions, that they would
otherwise have gained through an initial public offering. “These companies are
going public, just in the private market,” Dan Levitan, the managing partner of
the venture capital firm Maveron, told me recently. He means that in many
cases, hedge funds and other global investors that would have bought shares in
these firms after an I.P.O. are deciding to go into late-stage private rounds.
There is even an oxymoronic term for the act of obtaining private money in
place of a public offering: It’s called a “private I.P.O.” The delay in I.P.O.s
has altered how some venture capital firms do business. Rather than waiting for
an initial offering, Maveron, for instance, says it now sells its stake in a
start-up to other, larger private investors once it has made about 100 times
its initial investment. It is the sort of return that once was only possible
after an I.P.O. But there is also a downside to the new aversion to initial
offerings. When the unicorns do eventually go public and begin to soar — or
whatever it is that fantastical horned beasts tend to do when they’re healthy —
the biggest winners will be the private investors that are now bearing most of
the risk. It used to be that public investors who got in on the ground floor of
an initial offering could earn historic gains. If you invested $1,000 in Amazon
at its I.P.O. in 1997, you would now have nearly $250,000. If you had invested
$1,000 in Microsoft in 1986, you would have close to half a million. Public
investors today are unlikely to get anywhere near such gains from tech I.P.O.s.
By the time tech companies come to the market, the biggest gains have already
been extracted by private backers. Just 53 technology companies went public in
2014, which is around the median since 1980, but far fewer than during the boom
of the late 1990s and 2000, when hundreds of tech companies went public
annually, according to statistics maintained by Jay Ritter, a professor of
finance at the University of Florida. Today’s companies are also waiting
longer. In 2014, the typical tech company hitting the markets was 11 years old,
compared with a median age of seven years for tech I.P.O.s since 1980.
Over the last few
weeks, I’ve asked several founders and investors why they’re waiting; few were
willing to speak on the record about their own companies, but their answers all
amounted to “What’s the point?” Initial public offerings were also ways to compensate
employees and founders who owned lots of stock, but there are now novel
mechanisms — such as selling shares on a secondary market — for insiders to
cash in on some of their shares in private companies. Still, some observers
cautioned that the new trend may be a bad deal for employees who aren’t given
much information about the company’s performance. “One thing employees may be
confused about is when companies tell them, ‘We’re basically doing a private
I.P.O.,’ it might make them feel like there’s less risk than there really is,”
said Ms. Morrill of Mattermark. But she said it was hard to persuade people
that their paper gains may never materialize. “The Kool-Aid is really strong,”
she said. If the delay in I.P.O.s
becomes a normal condition for Silicon Valley, some observers say tech
companies may need to consider new forms of compensation for workers. “We
probably need to fundamentally rethink how do private companies compensate
employees, because that’s going to be an issue,” said Mr. Kupor, of Andreessen
Horowitz.
During a recent
presentation for Andreessen Horowitz’s limited partners — the institutions that
give money to the venture firm — Marc Andreessen, the firm’s co-founder, told
the journalist Dan Primack that he had never seen a sharper divergence in how
investors treat public- and private-company chief executives. “They tell the
public C.E.O., ‘Give us the money back this quarter,’ and they tell the private
C.E.O., ‘No problem , go for 10 years,’ ” Mr. Andreessen said. At some
point this tension will be resolved. “Private valuations will not forever be
higher than public valuations,” said Mr. Levitan, of Maveron. “So the question
is, Will private markets capitulate and go down or will public markets go up?” If the private investors are wrong, employees,
founders and a lot of hedge funds could be in for a reckoning. But if they’re
right, it will be you and me wearing the frown — the public investors who
missed out on the next big thing.
Questions 1-4
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 1-4 on your answer
sheet.
1. How much funds would you
gain by now, if you had invested 1000$ in the Amazon in 1997?
A. close to 500,000$
B.
It
is not stated in the text
C.
No
funds
D. 250,000$
2. Nowadays founders talk
about going public as a:
A. Benefit
B. Necessity
C. Possibility
D. profit.
3. In which time period was
the biggest number of companies going public?
A. early 1990s
B. late 1900s and 2000s
C. 1980s
D. late 1990s
4. According to the text, which
of the following is true?
A. Private valuations may be
forever higher than public ones.
B. Public valuations
eventually will become even less valuable.
C. The pressure might last for
a long time.
D. The main question is
whether the public market increase or the private market decrease.
Questions 5-9
Complete the sentences below.
Write ONLY ONE WORD from the
passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 5-9 on your answer sheet.
5. Skepticism was always
expected by the__________ of tech industry.
6. The new aversion to initial
offerings has its__________ .
7. Selling shares on a
secondary market is considered a __________mechanism.
8. Workers' compensation might
be an __________.
9. The public investors who failed
to participate in the next big thing might be the ones wearing the _________.
Questions 10-13
Do the following statements agree with the information in
the reading text?
In boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN
if there is no information on this
10. Private investors are
bearing most of the risk.
11. Not many investors were
willing to speak on the record
12. The typical tech company
hitting the markets in 1990s was 5 years old.
13. Marc Andreessen, the firm's
co-founder, expressed amazement with divergency in how investors treat
public.
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