Global Times - Weekend

Dell combines venture capital units after mega-merger with EMC

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Dell Technologi­es Inc said on Monday it has combined the venture capital operations from its two predecesso­r companies, computer maker Dell Inc and data storage firm EMC Corp, and said it plans to invest about $100 million a year in start-ups.

Dell also revealed a portfolio of 70 existing and prior investment­s made by both operations, some of which, like Arista Networks Inc, which went public in 2014, had not been previously disclosed.

Dell Technologi­es, run by Dell founder and PC pioneer Michael Dell, is the result of the $67 billion merger between the two companies in 2015, which created the largest privately held technology company in the world.

Before the deal, both companies maintained venture capital operations, called Dell Ventures and EMC Ventures. Most large Silicon Valley firms run venture capital arms as a way of keeping in touch with emerging tech companies.

The two groups in question operated differentl­y and had different structures, according to Dell Technologi­es.

EMC Ventures, headed by Scott Darling, invested capital held on EMC’s balance sheet. Dell Ventures, headed by Jim Lussier invested from specifical­ly created funds – a $60 million fund aimed at storage start-ups launched in 2012 and a broader $300 million fund aimed at later-stage start-ups like Dropbox in 2013 – in which the parent company was the only limited partner.

The newly combined unit, called Dell Technologi­es Capital, will operate along similar lines to EMC’s venture capital operation, investing average sums of $3 million to $10 million in both early- and late-stage start-ups from the parent’s $118.2 billion balance sheet, the company said.

The unit is headed by Darling, previously at EMC. Lussier left Dell in August 2016, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Darling said the new fund’s investment­s will consist of companies that Dell Technologi­es might eventually want to acquire and start-ups that help the broader data center ecosystem.

Dell’s new venture group disclosed that its portfolio includes Barefoot Networks, which has also received an investment from Dell’s rival Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co, and Ontonomo, an Israeli firm that makes technology for internet-connected vehicles and has received an investment from Delphi Automotive Plc.

Dell also revealed prior investment­s in companies that have since gone public or been sold, such as Arista and Anobit, which Apple Inc acquired in 2012.

“We ran the group in stealth mode for five years, which gave us greater latitude,” Darling said of the firm’s private investment­s.

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