Earth Day Observance: Cleantech Information Resources April 23, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in "venture capital", Information resources, endowment.Tags: "venture capital", cleantech
add a comment
This week’s posts about the drop in VC investing in Q1, and in Cleantech in particular, happened to coincide with the observance of Earth Day. So in honor of the 39th anniversary of Earth Day, Investor Collegia has compiled a list of blogs and other online information resources to help investors explore the topic further.
- GreenBiz.com: Categories include Energy & Climate, Resource Efficiency and Design & Innovation. The parent company, Greener World Media has a variety of related media brands including Greener Buildings, Greener Computing and Greener Design.
- Greentech Media: Comprehensive news, research and events company covers 10 sectors and special interests like venture capital. It offers specialized blogs like Cleantech Investing and subscription research like their Greentech Innovations Report.
- The Social Media and Web Guide to Going Green: A consumer-oriented post on the Social Media blog Mashable by Elsa Wenzel , it offers links to numerous sites with information and tools to help educate and support individuals wanting to go green.
- The Cleantech Group Comprehensive news and information similar in structure and the types of content from Greentech Media.
- Cleantech Blog: Founded by Neal Dikeman, a partner at Jane Capital Partners, a San Francisco based merchant bank focused on cleantech, energy & environmental technologies. Dikeman is also connected with CleanTech.org ”A virtual incubator for clean technologies, a resource to scientists, inventors, entrepreneurs and investors interested in cleantech.”
- Clean Ventures: The U.K. perspective on Cleantech and Cleantech investing. The most recent post by the founder, Tim Chapman, discusses the British government’s budget for cleantech initiatives.
- Cleantech RSS Feed on Google Reader : News feeds and blog posts tagged “Cleantech” as they happen.
If you want to suggest a source to add to the list, please leave a comment.
Please consider the environment before printing this blog post.
Comment Related to Venture Investing in Cleantech April 20, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in InvestorCollegia.add a comment
Follow-up to yesterday’s post about the decline in VC investing, especially in Cleantech. My comment on Fred Wilson’s blog A VC on a Deeper Dive into the First Quarter VC Numbers. I recommended his blog on this post: A Serious List of Blogs
I wrote on TechCrunch and VentureBeat’s take on the decline in VC investments in Q1, focused on their respective analysis of the decline in Cleantech investments. It helped to hear how you explained the drop. Here’s my post http://is.gd/tnpF
Originally posted as a comment by CathleenRitt on A VC using Disqus.
Venture Investing in Cleantech Awaits Economic Signal-Us April 18, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in Investment commentary.Tags: "venture capital", cleantech, endowment
3 comments
Yesterday VentureBeat and TechCrunch reported on the release of two reports showing that venture capital investment dropped significantly in Q1 2009 compared to Q4 2008 and over the last year.
A summary of the MoneyTree™ Report from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA), using data provided by Thomson Reuters, said that venture capitalists invested $3.0 billion in 549 deals in the first quarter of 2009, down 47% in dollars and 37% in deals from the fourth quarter of 2008, when $5.7 billion was invested in 866 deals. Every major industry sector saw double digit declines in investment in Q1, the lowest level of venture capital investment since 1997. Similarly, another database, Dow Jones VentureSource reported investments of $3.9 billion in 477 deals, a 50% decline from a year ago.
While both posts reported the same data and highlighted a serious decline in Cleantech investments, they diverged on their reaction to this development.
Interestingly, the MoneyTree 2008 year end report (PDF) states that the Clean Technology sector – defined as a cross industry category comprised of alternative energy, pollution and recycling, power supplies and conservation - experienced significant growth in 2008. $4.1 billion invested in 277 deals represented a 54% growth in dollar amount invested and a 16% growth in deals compared to the $2.7 billion invested in 238 deals in 2007. Clean Technology investments accounted for 15% of all venture capital investing in 2008, up from 9% in 2007. Seven of the ten largest deals in 2008 were in clean tech.
Yet in Q1 2009, venture capital investment in Cleantech fell significantly. $154 million went into 33 deals, an 84% drop in the $971 million invested in 67 deals in Q4 2008. It represented the lowest level of investments in the sector since 2005 and only one of the top ten largest deals in the first quarter.
In his post Good luck with that funding: Q1 sees lowest VC investment in more than a decade VentureBeat reporter Anthony Ha comments, ”those numbers are particularly mind-boggling since it was previously seen as the silver lining in the dark clouds hovering over venture”. In a recent VentureBeat interview, Mark Heesen, president of the National Venture Capital Association, indicated Cleantech could be the largest area for venture capital investment within five years.
In Venture Capital Down 50%. It’s Not Just the Recession, Folks, Tech Crunch reporter Sarah Lacy has a worthwhile take on the overall state of venture capital, making the case that the steep drop in funding is not the result of a recession but “more of an industry correcting for more than a decade of scale and liquidity issues.”
Saying she has more to write on the topic, Lacy offers 3 key takeaways, one of them being “Bye-bye Clean Tech Hyperbole.” She explains:
“It’s not that clean tech isn’t a huge opportunity. It’s not that it isn’t an important opportunity. But I’ve never believed it was the next wave equivalent to the personal computer, as several VCs and even President Barack Obama said during the campaign.”
I later discovered a post on a new site, TrueSlant, by Anne Field. In Good News for Cleantech Startups?, she reports that the advanced-battery and fuel-cell segment of cleantech received $126 million of the $154 million invested in Q1. Quoting a New York Times article, Field indicates that this segment of the sector has started to receive solicitations from the government looking to deploy the $2 billion in stimulus money set aside strictly for batteries. She suggests that more VC money will come back into the space as they see more stimulus money flow from the government and in what direction it goes.
While each reporter has a different perspective on the story, they each add an insight that leads to my key takeaway.
Chances are Cleantech will revert to being a major recipient of venture capital investment in the near future, even if the category is overhyped. Right now the oversupply of poorly performing and not fully-invested venture capital funds, combined with the impending economic stimulus, has actually stalled the process.
The economic stimulus package for cleantech effectively serves as an Economic Signal-Us for venture capitalists. By waiting for the government to act, they gain the advantage of knowing what cleantech will have a better chance of succeeding as investments.
In other words, by waiting to find out what the government stimulus thinks is the right cleantech, they reduce their risk of being wrong. This sounds like the closest to a sure thing that a venture capitalist could ever get, so pulling back and holding off, whether by instinct or design, is the smartest cleantech investment a venture capitalist could ever make right now.
A Serious Look at Blogs April 8, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in Information resources.Tags: "investment ideas", blogs, resources
1 comment so far
Every time I have attended a gathering of institutional investors and mentioned the word “blog” in a conversation, the room has erupted in peals of derisive laughter or stopped in stunned silence. I exaggerate, but not very much. That reaction probably stems from the popular perception of blogs as consumer-oriented sites targeted to teenage girl diarists, spotlight-craving dotcom billionaires, bored journalists and disgraced public figures. But in reality, as WordPress.com defines them,
“Blogs are an abbreviated version of ‘weblog’” which is a term used to describe web sites that maintain an ongoing chronicle of information.”
In essence, blogs are Internet-based independent publishing platforms, meaning investors will find in the “blogosphere” some of the best and most informed reporting, writing and commentary on just about any topic. Ironically, that has happened for the same reason blogging appeals to consumers. Blog software is cheap – often free – easy to use, and readily available on a computer network that reaches billions of people. It has removed the editor and distributor from the process of creating and delivering content, and by offering the opportunity to comment, democratized the chain of communications between experts and audience.
Most important it gives specialists, writers and dedicated hobbyists an accessible platform to present their knowledge, express their opinions and connect with others that share their interests.
This widespread, free, and rich source of information is indeed filled with angst-ridden ramblings, but, it is also filled with great information and insights. That makes it a great source of new investment ideas for you.
In my next post, I will recommend a list of blogs that you can take seriously.
Do you have a question or comment about blogs? Please leave it in the comments.
The Investor Collegia Blog April 7, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in InvestorCollegia.1 comment so far
See the About page for more information and stay tuned.
An Economic Stifle-Us? April 25, 2009
Posted by Cathleen Rittereiser in Investment commentary, InvestorCollegia.Tags: ARRA, cleantech, greentech, stimulus
add a comment
Interest in my post Venture Investing in Cleantech Awaits Economic Signal-Us (thanks to Fred Wilson) and my interest in learning more about cleantech, prompted me to continue to research the topic this past week. Thinking I would build on or add to my earlier post, I instead found the links to create the Earth Day list of cleantech resources. Then I found a post that reminded me of the comment I posted on behalf of “Investor”. He had said,
Sure enough, on Thursday, April 23 Greentech Media published How to Get Stimulus Dollars, a report on how the law firm Cooley Godward Kronish and McBee Strategic Consulting, a lobbying firm that describes itself as “one of the fastest growing clean energy consulting firms in Washington DC”, had formed a strategic alliance. The two companies have essentially formalized an existing collaborative relationship to provide tools and advice to help cleantech clients access funds made available under the government’s economic stimulus program. The partners predict that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) could create $100 billion in “public sector funding opportunities” over the next two years.
Some of the challenges cleantech companies will face include filing massive amounts of paperwork, such as 200 page applications, and meeting encroaching submission deadlines. Reporter Michael Kanellos gives the example of the $400 million advanced electric program. The government began accepting applications just over a month ago, will stop in two months and disburse money in September. He also says,
I italicized that phrase because it seems to support, and take even further, my recent conclusion that VC investment in cleantech had likely fallen sharply in the first quarter while venture capitalists waited for the government to decide what cleantech ideas and companies to fund. Waiting gives venture capitalists the advantage of knowing what cleantech will actually have a chance of being a successful investment. In other words, I said,
Kanellos seems to be saying that the program could also serve – justifiably or not – as an Economic Sorry-You for cleantech entrepreneurs.
If that is the case, once the cleantech winner companies have been chosen and the initial ARRA funds have been distributed, I ask: