The NEW Tech Boom

By Taryn Cooper, at 5:48 pm on December 21st, 2009

Inevitably with the end of the decade near we’re going to hear about Top Ten lists ranging from television shows to albums and now with technology events, according to this post from Tech Republic.  No doubt, technology drove much of the economy over the past ten years, and it is far from bottoming out at this point.

At the end of the year 2000, we saw the tech bubble about to burst, and it’s almost literally come full-circle in this year.  Possibly the biggest the-more-things-change-the-more-they-stay-the-same story of 2009 was that AOL went public,  spinning-off from Time Warner officially earlier this month.

One of the most intriguing stories in tech-media is the advent of social networking sites.  I would love to see the statistics on it, but I am sure there is a high percentage of folks using MySpace, Facebook and Twitter on a daily basis, showing just  how much technology has evolved in the past 10 years.  In fact, an article came out today on Twitter, and how they are in-the-black since it’s 2006 inaugural year.  Remember how long it took tech-retail stalwart Amazon.com to return a profit in the early part of the decade?

Google has also done its part to change the face of technology as well, after going public in 2004.  They’ve been incredibly acquisitive, buying such “hot” technology properties as YouTube and AdMob.  Except for today, when Google almost announced a deal where they would acquire customer-ratings service Yelp.com, however the deal reportedly fell through at the last minute.

Ten years ago, no one had ever heard of “smart phones,” let alone owned one.  Mostly anyone who uses a cellular phone has some kind of  “smart phone” ability, mostly made by Research in Motion or Apple.  Motorola emerged as the Phoenix out of the ashes with its new Droid product this year, making the smart phone choices numerous.

At the end of 2000, websites were shutting down and the “old economy” was thumbing their collective noses at the idea of the “new economy.”  What we’ve seen however in the last ten years is that it’s not only resistant, it has evolved and looks like it is here to stay.  Most of us should be interested to see what is going to happen in the next ten years.

American Express & Revolution Money = ?

By Mark Pason, at 6:33 pm on November 18th, 2009

American Express (NYSE:AXP) just spent $300mm to by Revolution Money, which is considered a competitor to PayPal.  Amex is so excited by the purchase, that CEO Ken Chenault went on CNBC to pump up the deal.  The business world must be shaking their heads wondering why the CEO of a company with a $49bb market cap would go television to talk about such a small of a deal.

He’s probably went on CNBC, so he doesn’t have to field all the calls from puzzled investors.  There’s some rumblings as to why Amex needs Revolution Money.  For $300mm, couldn’t they have whipped this up organically?

Well, Steve Case, co-founder of Revolution, knows a thing or two about selling an asset at its high.  After all, he sold AOL to Time Warner (NYSE:TWX.) Interestingly, James D. Robinson, Former Chairman and CEO of American Express, is one of Revolution’s board members and will most likely make a handsome profit from this sale.

It sounds like Case and Robinson may have pulled a fast one on the shareholders of American Express.  Either that or Mr. Chenault is helping out an old friend.

Tracked.com Weekly Topic: IPO, My!

By Taryn Cooper, at 5:33 pm on October 28th, 2009

I’m not sure if this week is more of the exception than the norm, but I felt like I was being transported back to the late-1990s with all the IPO filings that have been announced.

It’s not just the sheer volumes that I have seen, but the names that are being floated around in the IPO filings in the last week.  Recently,  Ancestry.com and Birds Eye Foods, to name a few, filed their S-1’s with the SEC.

Today, Vitamin Shoppe priced its IPO above its range of $14-16, at $17/share.

On Monday of this week, news hit that, ten years after their “failed” merger, Time Warner’s shareholders approved the spin-out of its AOL unitAOL’s star-studded Board of Directors, including the likes of former FCC-chairman Michael Powell and Procter & Gamble veteran Jim Stengel, were announced Monday as well.  Check out this article about what AOL and Time Warner will split up in the “divorce.”

Dole Foods priced its IPO last week, and has not fared well, with BreakingViews suggesting that expectations should be tamed for buyout firms expecting a big return on previously LBO’d units.

Finally, the never-ending saga of will-they-or-won’t-they, Vivendi CEO Jean-Bernard Levy suggested the company could IPO its 20% in NBC Universal IF they in fact decided to sell the stake.

Be on stand-by for the rest of the week, as we’ll be tracking IPOs this week at Tracked.com.

Tracked.com Topics: IPO, My!

By Taryn Cooper, at 1:46 pm on October 27th, 2009

I’m not sure if this week is more of the exception than the norm, but I felt like I was being transported back to the late-1990s with all the IPO filings that have been announced.

It’s not just the sheer volumes that I have seen, but the names that are being floated around in the IPO filings in the last week.  Recently,  Ancestry.com and Birds Eye Foods, to name a few, filed their S-1’s with the SEC.

The  big news on Monday of this week was that ten years after their “failed” merger, Time Warner’s shareholders approved the spin-out of its AOL unitAOL’s star-studded Board of Directors, including the likes of former FCC-chairman Michael Powell and Procter & Gamble veteran Jim Stengel, were announced Monday as well.  Check out this article about what AOL and Time Warner will split up in the “divorce.”

D0le Foods priced its IPO last week, and has not fared well, with BreakingViews suggesting that expectations should be tamed for buyout firms expecting a big return on previously LBO’d units.

Finally, the never-ending saga of will-they-or-won’t-they, Vivendi CEO Jean-Bernard Levy suggested the company could IPO its 20% in NBC Universal IF they in fact decided to sell the stake.

Be on stand-by for the rest of the week, as we’ll be tracking IPOs this week at Tracked.com.

Slow Your Roll There, Cowboy

By Taryn Cooper, at 11:24 am on December 2nd, 2008

My, how the plot thickens. Since Jerry Yang resigned from his post at Yahoo!, there have been grumblings about how a Yahoo!/Microsoft merger seemed imminent. Even as early as this morning, Dealbook stated that a merger between the search engines of Yahoo! and MSN made sense.

But slow up there, Hoss. The WSJ (subscriber content) reports that former AOL CEO Jonathan Miller was trying to raise money to buy Yahoo!? Stay tuned…this just got interesting.