Cape Times

Silicon Valley big guns in huge win

Microsoft buys out GitHub

- Eric Newcomer and Dina Bassr San Francisco/Seattle

TWO OF the most famous Silicon Valley venture capital firms just scored a huge win with Microsoft’s $7.5 billion (R95bn) purchase of GitHub, the online platform for developers sharing and collaborat­ing on code.

In 2012, Andreessen Horowitz cut a $100 million cheque to GitHub, which had previously been self-funded. Three years later, Sequoia Capital led a $250m round that valued the start-up at $2 billion.

On Monday, Microsoft announced the acquisitio­n, which is the largest venture-backed enterprise software sale in history, according to CB Insights.

Massive return

It will generate a massive return for two of Silicon Valley’s most elite venture firms, one founded less than a decade ago and the other started in 1972. The duo have long competed for high-profile deals and needle each other behind closed doors.

Andreessen, founded in 2009, has long been criticised by competitor­s for paying too much for its deals.

At a rumoured $750m valuation, Andreessen’s 2012 investment in GitHub put a lofty valuation on a company that had never taken venture capital funding before.

But the bet proved to be savvy, as the importance of open-source developmen­t has climbed and GitHub’s popularity increased.

“Andreessen attracted a lot of attention for an out-sized bet at the Series A level for an unproven company and is going to be rewarded handsomely for the risk they took,” said Phil Haslett, co-founder of EquityZen, a marketplac­e for shares in pre-IPO technology companies.

The venture firm could make nearly $1bn off the investment, Haslett estimated.

“We had this thesis on software becoming a very important part of this global economy and every company becoming a software company,” said Peter Levine, the partner who led the deal for Andreessen Horowitz.

“We wrote a very large cheque early on and I think it speaks to the potential when we saw the company.”

Three years later, Sequoia worried that it was overpaying when GitHub’s estimated worth climbed to $2 billion in the company’s Series B round.

“Getting comfortabl­e with the valuation in the B was challengin­g,” said Jim Goetz, the Sequoia partner who led the deal.

The GitHub sale marks another big win for Goetz, who led the only outside investment in the messaging app WhatsApp, which sold to Facebook for $22bn in 2014.

Morgan Stanley banker Michael Grimes, who also worked on the WhatsApp acquisitio­n, helped get the $7.5bn GitHub deal over the finish line.

Sequoia likely earned a return of about $700m on GitHub depending on its exact ownership stake, Haslett estimated. “Sequoia is going to be quite pleased,” Haslett said.

“Not WhatsApp pleased, but pretty content with what they made.”

Goetz said both bets required faith in the company’s founders – Jan Koum at WhatsApp and Chris Wanstrath at GitHub.

“Both companies had unorthodox founders with enormous conviction. I think you have that in both Jan and Chris,” Goetz said.

Engaged

“Both companies are deeply engaged, transforma­tively, in the way that software’s created. When the history of software is written, there will be a chapter on Chris and GitHub, not a footnote.”

In some ways, the sale was a saving grace for its investors. GitHub has had perpetual management troubles and a lengthy chief executive search.

Wanstrath had quietly stepped away from running the company, leaving the day-to-day management to his top executives. To make matters worse for investors, the co-founders have long said that making money wasn’t their top priority.

In the end, the Microsoft deal was sealed by Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella.

“It was really (Wanstrath’s) relationsh­ip with Satya and the interactio­n and how it evolved over the last few months,” Goetz said.

“All the other interest Chris had rebuffed. It’s not that he’s a socialist, but he wasn’t interested in monetising the developer.” – Bloomberg

It’s said to be the largest venturebac­ked enterprise software sale in history.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa