Blog

  • Ericsson is angling for Microsoft’s Mediaroom IPTV package, report claims

    Microsoft may sell its Mediaroom IPTV package to Ericsson, according to a Bloomberg report on Wednesday.

    The report quotes unnamed “people with knowledge of the matter” as saying the two companies are in talks over the potential sale. Neither company would comment on the report when I asked them today, but the idea of the sale is perfectly plausible.

    Mediaroom is a customizable platform that is mostly bundled by telcos, who want to take on more traditional TV service providers with their broadband services — customers include AT&T, Deutsche Telekom and Telus. As it also comes with DVR capabilities, Mediaroom is in some ways a competitor to TiVo .

    According to Bloomberg’s source, Microsoft wants to focus more on delivering IPTV through its Xbox consoles. Swedish networking equipment vendor Ericsson, meanwhile, is all about servicing its telco customers, so the addition of Mediaroom to its lineup would make a lot of sense. The company could integrate the software with its existing IPTV managed services and systems integration portfolio – in February, Ericsson said it had signed 240 IPTV contracts with various service providers.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • HTC reportedly planning DROID DNA successor

    HTC DROID DNA Sequel
    HTC’s (2498) J Butterfly, known locally on Verizon as the DROID DNA, has been a hot seller for the company since it debuted last fall in Asia and North America. The smartphone has experienced impressive sales in Japan, even surpassing Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone 5 on KDDI’s network in early December, and the company has struggled to keep up with consumer demand. According to Focus Taiwan, Benjamin Ho, HTC’s chief marketing officer, revealed that the company is now planning to release a second-generation Butterfly to capitalize on the smartphone’s success. Earlier rumors suggested that Verizon was preparing a DROID DNA sequel, known as the DROID DNA Plus, although it featured the exact same specs as the HTC One. The executive did not give a timeframe for the second-generation Butterfly smartphone.

  • Call in podcast: T-Mobile iPhone and the best Android keyboard

    It’s another edition of the weekly call-in show where we answer your tech questions. We start off the show with the big news that T-Mobile finally has its own iPhone and LTE network. Then we get right into your questions about another CDMA Nexus phone, Chromebook tips, and what’s the best keyboard for Android?

    To be a part of the show, just call in and leave a voicemail at 262-KCTOFEL. If you do, we’ll play back the question on the show and answer it. Or you can tweet me at @kevinctofel on Twitter. Each week, I’ll answer as many questions as I can while keeping the podcast to a manageable amount of time: 20 to 30 minutes at most.

    Show notes:
    Hosts: Kevin Fitchard and Kevin C. Tofel

    • What are the chances of Verizon getting another Nexus phone?
    • Can any Chromebook or Chromebox run the crouton scripts for Linux?
    • Why would anyone wait for the phone to ‘arrive’ at T-mobile when there’s already an unlocked GSM model?
    • What’s the best keyboard for Android?

    (download this episode)

    Subscribe to RSS

    iTunes

    Stitcher Radio

    SELECT PREVIOUS EPISODES:

    Podcast: Facebook’s feedin’; Lean In’s meanin’; and everyone’s Hadoop-in

    IoT: When devices can talk, will they conspire against you?

    Call-in show: Why the “I’m leaving iPhone” trend?

    Internet of things Podcast – Almond+’s nutty idea: Making sensor connectivity a snap

    Yahoo’s WFH Boo-Boo

    PlayStation Snore?

    Podcast: Why the internet of things is cool and how Mobiplug is helping make it happen

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Boxee TV Update Adds Vudu 3D Content And DLNA Streaming From Computers And Mobile Devices

    BoxeeTV-straight

    Boxee TV has a new firmware update making its way out to its connected set-top boxes this week, which includes a number of big improvements including the addition of DLNA streaming. Spotted by GigaOM, the update also adds 3D streaming of content from Vudu, the video streaming service from Walmart, and changes to its TV guide and notification settings.

    Boxee TV is the follow-up to Boxee’s original hardware, the Boxee Box. That first-gen device actually had DLNA streaming while the Boxee TV shipped without it. The addition of DLNA means that the Boxee TV can now playback media over a local network from a computer or drive running DLNA server software, and can also play content from select Android devices and from a number of iOS apps. Photos, video and music can all be shared via the DLNA streaming protocol. It’s like a non-Apple-specific version of AirPlay, and it’s a very handy addition to Boxee TV that considerably increases its general usefulness.

    The Boxee TV also now gets on-device DVR management, which is a big improvement over the old system where you can to schedule recordings via a website on a separate computer. In other words, this whole update seems to have been about ironing out the kinks and making sure the Boxee TV fully delivered on the generally good impressions it received when it launched late last year.

    If you’re in the market for a set-top streaming device, the update makes Boxee TV a good option for consumers who might be looking at either an Apple TV or the new Roku 3, but who want a DLNA-capable device to handle streaming of their own media collection. Like both of those devices, the Boxee TV retails for $99.

  • Ridgemont and Post Oak Commit $100m to Titan River

    Ridgemont Equity Partners and Post Oak Energy Capital have announced a $100 million capital commitment to the management team of Titan River Energy. Titan River’s management team will be co-investing alongside Ridgemont and Post Oak. No other financial terms of the transaction were disclosed. Titan River is a newly formed oil and gas company headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, with an additional office in The Woodlands.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Charlotte, NC and Houston (March 27, 2013) – Ridgemont Equity Partners (Ridgemont) and Post Oak Energy Capital (Post Oak) today announced a $100 million capital commitment to the management team of Titan River Energy, LLC (Titan River). Titan River’s management team will be co-investing alongside Ridgemont and Post Oak. No other financial terms of the transaction were disclosed.

    Titan River is a newly formed oil and gas company headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, with an additional office in The Woodlands. Titan River will initially focus on the drilling and development of oil-prone shale plays in Texas. The company’s management team includes Chip Simmons, CEO; Lee Matthews, President and COO; Don Pearce, EVP of drilling operations; Kent Bowker, EVP of Geology; and Brennan Potts, VP of Land and Business Development. The management team has a proven track record with extensive experience in the geologic assessment, drilling and completion of over 400 horizontal wells in several major shale plays, with a recent focus on the Eagle Ford Shale.

    “The Titan River team is privileged to have access to the financial support and industry knowledge of Ridgemont and Post Oak,” said Chip Simmons, CEO of Titan River. “I also feel fortunate to be partnered with such a high caliber management team. We are anxious to pursue our business model of converting acreage into reserves via drilling joint ventures, farm-ins and organic leasing opportunities.”

    Lee Matthews, President and COO of Titan River, added: “It has been a lifelong goal of mine to form an upstream operating company that has strong technical expertise, financial strength and an entrepreneurial structure designed to responsibly develop the tremendous resources our nation has to offer. I am delighted to be a part of this veteran management team and to grow Titan River with the strong financial backing of Ridgemont and Post Oak.”

    “The principals of Ridgemont have known Chip Simmons for many years. We have great appreciation for his abilities and much respect for Titan River’s technical team, led by Lee Matthews,” said John Shimp, Partner at Ridgemont. “We look forward to working with Chip, Lee and our partners at Post Oak.”

    “We are pleased to be involved with Ridgemont, as well as Chip and Lee, in creating Titan River,” said Frost Cochran, Managing Director at Post Oak. “We believe that the combination of management talent at Titan is optimal for creating a successful company in the current domestic oil and gas market.”

    About Titan River:
    Titan River Energy is a Fort Worth-based oil and gas company focused on the drilling and development of unconventional resources in Texas. Titan River will initially focus on oil-prone shale resources via joint ventures, farm-ins and organic leasing opportunities. Titan River is managed by a team of proven operational experts in horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques, complemented by substantial geologic capabilities. Ridgemont Equity Partners and Post Oak Energy Capital committed $100 million to Titan River in March 2013, alongside investments by management. www.titanriverenergy.com.

    About Ridgemont Equity Partners:
    Ridgemont Equity Partners is a Charlotte-based private equity firm that specializes in middle market buyout and growth equity investments. Since 1993, the principals of Ridgemont have invested over $3 billion in more than 110 companies. The firm focuses on investments of $25 million to $75 million in industries in which it has deep expertise, including basic industries and services, energy, healthcare, and telecommunications/media/technology.

    About Post Oak Energy Capital:
    Post Oak Energy Capital, which was established in 2006, is based in Houston, Texas. Its management team has executive management experience and a broad network in the energy business as well as significant expertise in private equity investments, operations, development, finance, acquisitions and divestitures. The firm pursues private equity investments primarily in the upstream sector of the oil and gas industry in North America and, to a lesser extent, in oil field services and related infrastructure. Post Oak works in close partnership with operating management teams to build businesses, accelerate growth and enhance shareholder value.

    ###

    Media Contacts:
    Bill Haynes, Ridgemont Equity Partners
    BackBay Communications
    212-209-3844, x224
    [email protected]

    Kelly Kimberly, Post Oak
    713-328-5151 office
    713-822-7538 mobile
    [email protected]

    The post Ridgemont and Post Oak Commit $100m to Titan River appeared first on peHUB.

  • Reuters – Husqvarna Appoints Kai Warn as New CEO

    Kai Warn has been appointed new president and CEO of Husqvarna Group. Hans Linnarson, who was appointed president and CEO in 2011, will continue to work for the group until he retires early 2014. Warn was prevously operations partner at private equity firm IK Investment Partners.

    Reuters – Husqvarna : * Kai Warn appointed new president and CEO of Husqvarna Group * Hans Linnarson, who was appointed President and CEO in 2011, will continue to work for the Group until he retires early 2014 * Warn was operations partner at private equity firm IK Investment Partners (Reporting by Stockholm newsroom, +4687001014)

    The post Reuters – Husqvarna Appoints Kai Warn as New CEO appeared first on peHUB.

  • Reuters – CBS Takes 50% Stake in TV Guide

    CBS is now the proud owner of iconic cable channel and TV program recommendation service TV Guide, writes Reuters. The media company acquired a 50 percent stake in TV Guide, which includes both the cable channel of the same name as well as TVguide.com.

    Reuters – CBS is now the proud owner of iconic cable channel and TV program recommendation service TV Guide.

    The media company announced today that it acquired a 50 percent stake in TV Guide, which includes both the cable channel of the same name as well as TVguide.com. The cable channel is available in over 80 million homes and plays entertainment news alongside a programming grid. But TV Guide’s website stretches far beyond just a simple programming grid, offering content recommendations via mobile apps and entertainment news coverage.

    CBS purchased the stake from One Equity Partners, JPMorgan Chase’s private equity firm that initially purchased 49 percent of TV Guide for $122 million back in 2009. However, CBS paid just $100 million in the deal, according to Deadline. The announcement ends speculation that Yahoo would pick up the property as part of its bid to return to its web service roots while helping to push its own media properties.

    Under terms of the deal, TV Guide will undergo a rebranding effort and be paired with some of the entertainment news programs owned by CBS Entertainment Tonight, OMG! Insider, etc.).

    Filed under: Business, Deals, Media

    The post Reuters – CBS Takes 50% Stake in TV Guide appeared first on peHUB.

  • Reuters – Dell’s Former Lieutenant Leads Coup Attempt

    Dave Johnson finds himself once again pitted against a former employer, writes Reuters. In leading Blackstone Group‘s 11th-hour bid for Dell Inc, the acquisitions expert has seated himself across the table from ex-boss and company founder Michael Dell. Their relationship has now become a crucial element in the battle over the largest private equity-led buyout since the financial crisis, writes Reuters.

    Reuters – Dave Johnson finds himself once again pitted against a former employer.

    In leading Blackstone Group’s 11th-hour bid for Dell Inc, the acquisitions expert and famously tough negotiator has seated himself across the table from ex-boss and company founder Michael Dell. Their relationship has now become a crucial element in the battle over the largest private equity-led buyout since the financial crisis.

    There may even be echoes of the way Nabisco Brands President John Greeniaus ended up switching sides from RJR Nabisco’s CEO Ross Johnson in the struggle for control of the food and tobacco conglomerate in the leveraged buyout boom of the late 1980s.

    Blackstone’s Johnson, a former IBM executive with a reputation for working through the night rather than early in the day, may be joining the party late. But he could still up-end Michael Dell’s original proposal to take the company private for $24.4 billion.

    Whether the two former confidants can work together may decide the fate of the world’s No. 3 PC maker.

    The soft-spoken Red Sox and New England Patriots fan is described by people who have known him for a long time as likeable, smart and loyal. But that loyalty has been questioned twice as he has headed for the exits under controversial circumstances – once after more than 27 years at IBM, and then when he left Dell.

    IBM unsuccessfully sued Johnson when he departed in 2009, alleging he violated a non-compete agreement.

    Now Michael Dell – who told his executive team that Johnson would remain a close and personal adviser when he left to join Blackstone in January – is fighting to hold onto his company against a bid mounted by Blackstone less than three months later. Blackstone has not mentioned a role for his former boss.

    “For all the good he does in an organization, the exit always seems to burn him,” said a person close to Johnson.

    “There was a lot of goodwill (at IBM) but in the last two minutes, he completely erases 25 years of history. Same thing at Dell.”

    The stakes are high for both men. Michael Dell could lose control of a company he nursed from a dorm-room operation into a global personal computer maker. He doesn’t only have Blackstone breathing down his neck but has to also contend with a competing offer from billionaire investor Carl Icahn. Meanwhile, Johnson’s first deal could be one of the most ambitious in technology for Blackstone in years.

    Among people who know Michael Dell and Johnson, there is little agreement about how well the two men get along now.

    The relationship was still close when Johnson, who led some $10 billion worth of deals during his time at Dell, worked to bolster the company’s non-PC-making businesses in areas such as software and enterprise services.

    Johnson was said to have weighed the offer from Blackstone for a while before taking the plunge, one of the people said.

    Three others said Johnson left Dell alienated, and that some members of top management were unhappy with his track record and had few qualms about letting him leave for the world’s largest private equity firm.

    “Dave came into Dell as a change agent. Change agents have a tough job, and their job is to break glass,” one of these people said. “And sometimes where you are breaking glass, people don’t like what you are doing.”

    A spokesman for Michael Dell declined to comment, while a Blackstone spokesman declined to comment on behalf of Johnson. A Dell Inc spokesman also declined to comment.

    WHEELING AND DEALING

    During more than three years at the Texas-based computer maker, Johnson oversaw 18 to 20 acquisitions, according to a Dell spokesman. He reported directly to Michael Dell.

    People who know him say Johnson is more comfortable wheeling and dealing in smaller settings, less at ease in the spotlight of major presentations such as Dell’s analysts’ day.

    He was also known for keeping late hours.

    “You can ask anyone at IBM,” one of the people said. If Johnson’s assistant scheduled a meeting early in the morning it probably “wasn’t going to happen,” this person said.

    Johnson oversaw the 2009 purchase of Perot Systems Corp, which catapulted Dell into the technology services market alongside IBM and HP. Other deals during his tenure included Quest Software, SecureWorks, SonicWall Inc and Wyse Technology.

    At Dell, Johnson was brought in to help beef up the company’s enterprise-related portfolio and diversify away from its reliance on PCs. To that end, Johnson went on an acquisition spree for small to mid-size companies. A big believer in the proper integration of acquired companies, Johnson often told team members that “the real success of a transaction is in the integration.”

    The 61-year old brought discipline and rigor to Dell’s M&A machine, instituting a playbook that aimed to standardize the M&A and integration process, one of the people said.

    That playbook, for example, had templates for documents and contained a list of internal subject-matter experts.

    While Johnson’s strategy helped Dell expand its portfolio and reduce its reliance on PCs, the strategy was also criticized for being slow to offset a decline in PC sales and for failing to integrate the acquired companies fully with Dell to take advantage of scale.

    But Carr Lanphier, analyst with Morningstar, said it is too early to tell whether Johnson’s term at Dell was a success as his effort at diversification is not complete.

    When Johnson joined Blackstone, the private equity giant had been looking for ways to bolster its technology team after having suffered a couple of dealmaker losses. These included Chip Schorr, who left Blackstone in 2010 after serving as its global head of technology investing.

    Johnson is working on Dell with Chinh Chu, one of Blackstone’s most experienced partners, who has been carrying out transactions for the firm since 1990.

    Blackstone has reached out to a number of candidates who could run Dell should its bid succeed, replacing Michael Dell.

    Sources involved in the fast-evolving discussions said Michael Dell and Johnson have competing visions for the company.

    Two people close to Michael Dell have said he was concerned that Blackstone’s buyout offer would dismantle the PC maker. Other people familiar with the situation have said Blackstone has considered a potential sale of Dell’s financial services business as part of a strategy to turn things around.

    Divestitures are not part of the plans by Michael Dell and his buyout partner, the private equity firm Silver Lake, two of the sources said.

    (Editing by Edwin Chan, Tim Dobbyn and Martin Howell)

    The post Reuters – Dell’s Former Lieutenant Leads Coup Attempt appeared first on peHUB.

  • Pricing Engine Raising Series A

    Pricing Engine is in the midst of a $1.5 million Series A round. David Liu, founder and CEO of XO Group is committing $1 million to the business. Pricing Engine is a solution provider for small businesses to help them manage and improve their online ad results.

    ANNOUNCEMENT

    Pricing Engine, is a simple solution to a nagging problem for time-crunched small businesses: how to manage and improve their online ad results without being a techie or spending a ton of money to have someone else manage it for them.
    Pricing Engine is in the midst of a $1.5m Series A round, with $1m coming from David Liu, founder and CEO of XO Group, who is also a board member and strategic adviser as well as a reseller.
    Now available for use in search advertising, Pricing Engine will add capabilities for optimizing display advertising, social media marketing and e-commerce later this year.
    Jeremy Kagan, founder and CEO of Pricing Engine, is a former Vice President of Global Account Management for Sony Music Entertainment and is now an adjunct professor of digital media at Columbia Business School who has also taught at Wharton. He also advises tech startups.

    The post Pricing Engine Raising Series A appeared first on peHUB.

  • USS Completes Brisbane Airtrain Acquisition

    The Universities Superannuation Scheme Limited, one of the largest pension schemes in the UK, has completed the acquisition of the Brisbane Airtrain. The transaction was arranged by USS Investment Management Limited, USS’s principal investment manager and advisor who will manage the investment on USS’s behalf.

    PRESS RELEASE

    The Universities Superannuation Scheme Limited (“USS”), one of the largest pension schemes in the United Kingdom, today announced that USS Axle Pty Limited (“USS Axle”), a subsidiary of USS, has successfully completed the acquisition of the Brisbane Airtrain.

    The transaction was arranged by USS Investment Management Limited (USSIM), USS’s principal investment manager and advisor who will manage the investment on USS’s behalf.

    Following a period of exclusivity in December, Airtrain Holdings Limited (“Airtrain”) entered into a binding agreement with USS Axle for the sale of the company for approximately A$110 million in cash on 21 December 2012. The transaction was implemented by way of a scheme of arrangement under which USS Axle has acquired the entire issued share capital of Airtrain Holdings Limited, the parent company of Brisbane Airtrain. CP2 Limited has co-invested 1% of the total consideration and will be retained by USS in an asset management role.

    The completion of the transaction follows the satisfaction of a number of conditions precedent including approvals from the Queensland Department of Transport, the Foreign Investment Review Board as well as approval by the requisite majorities of Airtrain Holdings’ shareholders.

    USS has made a number of investments in Australia over recent years including the take private of ConnectEast, which operates the EastLink toll road in Melbourne and the Airport Link rail company in Sydney.

    Gavin Merchant, Senior Investment Manager Infrastructure at USSIM, commented, “Brisbane Airtrain is a key piece of transport infrastructure that supports the strong growth of Brisbane and South East Queensland. As a Director on the Board I look forward to working closely with the outstanding Airtrain management team, its contractual partners and all stakeholders to continue the high levels of safety and performance and to grow passenger numbers.”

    Rob Horsnall, Investment Manager Infrastructure at USSIM, added, “USS’s ability to all equity fund the transaction, without the need for external funding allowed us to agree and execute the acquisition of Brisbane Airtrain quickly and efficiently.”

    USS was advised by CP2 Limited and Johnson, Winter & Slattery. Airtrain was advised by Rothschild and King & Wood Mallesons.

    ###

    For more information, please contact:
    MHP Communications
    Andrew Fleming [email protected] +44 (0)20 3128 8523
    James Morgan [email protected] +44 (0)20 3128 8533

    About Airtrain
    Airtrain Holdings Limited is an unlisted public company that owns the concession until 2036 for the Brisbane Airport Rail Link which consists of an 8.5km elevated railway and two stations at Brisbane Airport’s international and domestic terminals.

    Airtrain commenced operations in 2001 and is the sole rail service connecting the Brisbane Airport to the Brisbane CBD, the wider Queensland Rail passenger rail network and the Gold Coast. In the 12 months to 30 June 2012, there were 1.76 million passenger trips on the Airtrain.

    About USS
    USS was established in 1974 as the principal final salary pension scheme for universities and higher education institutions in the UK. It is the 2nd largest UK pension scheme with assets of £36bn as at 31 December 2012.

    About USSIM
    USSIM is a wholly owned subsidiary of USS and has been appointed as USS’s principal investment manager and advisor. It currently employs 76 investment professionals and has approximately £36 billion of assets under management and advice as of the 31st December 2012.

    USSIM has a dedicated Infrastructure team that currently manages approximately £1 billion in infrastructure assets on behalf of USS with a mandate to invest up to 7% of USS’s assets in infrastructure over the medium term.

    About CP2
    CP2 is a specialist infrastructure investment manager with offices in Sydney and London. It has over A$2.6 billion of funds under management in core infrastructure assets that provide secure, stable, inflation protected cash flows over the long term.

    The post USS Completes Brisbane Airtrain Acquisition appeared first on peHUB.

  • Caribbean Property Group and Perella Weinberg in Banco Popular Deal

    Caribbean Property Group and affiliates of Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy, have completed the acquisition of a portfolio of non-performing commercial and constructions loans, and commercial and single-family real estate from Banco Popular de Puerto Rico. The portfolio has a combined unpaid principal balance on loans and appraised value of other real estate owned of approximately $995 million and a book value of approximately $540 million.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Caribbean Property Group, one of the leading real estate investors and asset managers in the Caribbean and Central America, and affiliates of Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy, today announced that they have completed the acquisition of a portfolio of non-performing commercial and constructions loans, and commercial and single-family real estate from Banco Popular de Puerto Rico (“Banco Popular”). The portfolio has a combined unpaid principal balance on loans and appraised value of other real estate owned of approximately $995 million and a book value of approximately $540 million.

    Caribbean Property Group and affiliates of Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy purchased the portfolio as part of a joint venture between the firms. This is the third transaction completed between the parties.

    Under the terms of the transaction, Banco Popular will provide an advance facility of approximately $35 million. The facility will cover cost-to-complete amounts and expenses of certain projects. Banco Popular will also provide approximately $30 million in the form of a working capital line to fund certain operating expenses of the asset-owning Borrower. Additionally, Banco Popular will receive approximately $99 million in cash, a note for approximately $182 million as seller financing and a 24.9% equity interest in the Borrower.

    David Schiff, Partner at Perella Weinberg Partners and Portfolio Manager of the Asset Based Value Strategy, stated, “Identifying value-driven investment opportunities is a critical focus of the Asset Based Value Strategy. We are delighted to partner with Caribbean Property Group, which shares our approach to investing in compelling real estate opportunities in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean.”

    Mark Lipschutz, Partner and CEO of Caribbean Property Group, stated, “This was a very complex deal involving over 2,000 non-performing loans and just under 1,000 REO properties. We couldn’t have completed the transaction within the required time frame without the great working relationship we enjoy with both Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy and Banco Popular. This transaction evidences that our commitment to Puerto Rico remains as strong as ever.”

    About Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy:
    Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy is a leading post-financial crisis provider of U.S. specialty finance solutions. Since inception in 2008, the Strategy has grown to manage in excess of $2.1 billion in equity capital through a number of different investment vehicles. Perella Weinberg Partners’ Asset Based Value Strategy can deliver significant capital, technical expertise and infrastructure in a wide range of asset classes and structures, including both real and financial assets. Capital for the Strategy is contributed by, among others, a diversified group of institutional investors who seek to invest in compelling opportunities at favorable valuations.

    About Perella Weinberg Partners:
    Perella Weinberg Partners is a leading independent, client-focused financial services firm providing advisory and asset management services to a broad, global client base, including corporations, institutions and governments. The Advisory business advises clients on mergers, acquisitions, defense advisory, financial restructuring, private capital raising, and pension matters. The Asset Management business includes a suite of hedge fund strategies, private investment funds (including real estate) and outsourced CIO solutions. Together with its affiliates, the Asset Management business has capital commitments and managed assets of approximately $8.6 billion. With more than 400 employees, Perella Weinberg Partners maintains offices in New York, London, Abu Dhabi, Austin, Beijing, Denver, Dubai, and San Francisco.

    About Caribbean Property Group
    Caribbean Property Group is one of the leading real estate investors, and asset managers in the Caribbean and Central America. Since its founding in 1998, CPG has acquired, developed, or redeveloped approximately $2.2 billion of real estate assets in the Caribbean and Central America. The firm maintains offices in New York City, West Palm Beach and San Juan, Puerto Rico.

    Perella Weinberg Partners Media Contacts
    Kara Findlay
    Perella Weinberg Partners
    212-287-3197

    Renée Soto/Marisa Bricca
    Sard Verbinnen & Co
    212-687-8080

    Caribbean Property Group Media Contact
    Barry Breeman
    212-479-6812

    The post Caribbean Property Group and Perella Weinberg in Banco Popular Deal appeared first on peHUB.

  • SoFi Secures Credit Facility from Morgan Stanley

    Social Finance has secured a $60 million warehouse line from Morgan Stanley. The facility gives SoFi increased capacity to further expand its successful community-based lending model.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Social Finance, Inc., the private student lender, announced today that it has secured a $60 million warehouse line from Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS). The facility gives SoFi increased capacity to further expand its successful community-based lending model.

    SoFi has transformed student lending by connecting investors and borrowers via school-specific lending funds that yield compelling financial returns while lowering the cost of student debt. Since launching publicly in April 2012, SoFi has seen exceptional traction, having funded $90 million in loans and received interest from potential borrowers for an additional $250 million in loans.

    “This financing represents a significant milestone for SoFi.” stated Mike Cagney, Chief Executive Officer, SoFi. “The quality of our borrowers and rigorous underwriting criteria attracted the support of a world-class financial partner in Morgan Stanley. This credit facility supports our plans for ambitious growth and allows us to have a greater impact on the student loan market.”

    This announcement comes two weeks after Sallie Mae (Nasdaq: SLM), the largest U.S. student lender, sold $1.1 billion of securities backed by private student loans, according to the Wall Street Journal. The popularity of this sale demonstrated investor interest in student loan credit.

    “SoFi’s student loan assets reflect the highest quality unsecured lending assets available,“ said Cagney. “By adding more responsible underwriting and a community-based social contract between borrower and investor, our private education loans are a significantly more attractive investment.”

    About SoFi

    SoFi is transforming the $1 trillion student loan market. By connecting accredited alumni investors with students and recent graduates through school-specific loan funds, investors can earn a compelling risk-adjusted return while helping borrowers reduce the cost of their loans. Founded in 2011 by a team of Stanford Graduate School of Business alumni, SoFi has funded over $90 million in new and refinanced student loans to students and alumni of 78 schools.
    About Morgan Stanley

    Morgan Stanley [NYSE: MS] is a leading global financial services firm providing a wide range of investment banking, securities, investment management and wealth management services. The Firm’s employees serve clients worldwide including corporations, governments, institutions and individuals from more than 1,200 offices in 43 countries. Since 2006, Morgan Stanley has executed more than $5 billion in investments to strengthen underserved communities.

    The post SoFi Secures Credit Facility from Morgan Stanley appeared first on peHUB.

  • DataStax pushes NoSQL into Europe with new London-based subsidiary

    Last year was a good year for NoSQL outfit DataStax. The big data company’s customer base increased roughly tenfold to 270, including 20 Fortune 100 firms and names such as eBay, Netflix and Thomson Reuters. It also picked up a $25 million C round in October, with one of the intended uses of that funding being global expansion. Now it’s making good on that promise by opening a European subsidiary.

    The DataStax Enterprise 3 big data bundle fuses Hadoop with the Apache Cassandra database and Apache Solr enterprise search platform, creating what CEO Billy Bosworth claims is “the first viable alternative to Oracle since Oracle.” The big selling points here are linear scalability, operational simplicity and an emphasis on business continuity.

    As the company has noticed that much of its new customer base was sited in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), its latest move makes sense: DataStax has opened up a London office, and it’s a full-on subsidiary rather than just a branch office.

    As Bosworth told me, the idea here is to be able to respond quickly to European market demands, which range from language variation to a different style of partnership:

    “Without any presence in EMEA, we ended up in 2012 with 10 percent of our customers located in the EMEA region – that was 100 percent inbound; we didn’t do any programs or outbound activity. We have Scoreloop in Germany, the mobile gaming platform, and Trademob, the mobile app platform. We have mobile carriers who are decommissioning Oracle because they have to have a multi-data-center solution, and a London-based bank chose DataStax over Oracle for their ecommerce platform.

    “In the UK, the business aspect of it is not that different from the U.S. … but as you move into the European continent, you do want to have some local language skills. And when you move into France and Spain and Italy, now you’re into a very boutique partner network. Those partners have very good relationships with their customers but are often not on the same scale as a big [systems integrator] like Accenture. The only way to really get close enough to that partner network is for us to be in the region as well.”

    With a portfolio as open-source-centric as DataStax’s is, Bosworth added, the company is also looking forward to hosting “a ton of meet-ups in the region” in the coming months.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Morning Advantage: Female Leaders Have Tempers, Too

    It seems as though Christine Quinn, a Democratic mayoral candidate in New York City, likes to yell. According to The New York Times, she once screamed at a city housing advocate, complete with table pounding and a Bambi reference. She is described as “controlling, temperamental and surprisingly volatile, with a habit of hair-trigger eruptions of unchecked, face-to-face wrath.” And Quinn readily admits to it: “I don’t think being pushy or bitchy or tough, or however you want to characterize it, is a bad thing. New Yorkers want somebody who’s going to get things done.”

    OK. So would the Times have covered this story differently if the leader in question was a man? The internet isn’t so sure. The Atlantic Wire has a nice roundup of differing opinions from female writers. The general feeling, at least if all the facts are true, is that Quinn is, well, a politician in the tradition of other scream-y politicians. But does this make her actions acceptable? Not according to The American Prospect’s Paul Waldman, who acknowledges the gender issue, but ultimately says it’s not the important part of the story here. He concludes: “If you treat people around you abusively, especially if they’re people who are lower in the hierarchy than you, then you’re just not a good person.” And, he points out, being a jerk in the business world “invariably produces sub-par performance.”

    STICK TO MATH

    Sorry, CFOs: CEOs Don’t Think You’d Make Good COOs (CFO)

    While CFOs are increasingly a part of running company operations, a new survey of CEOs indicates that they may not be entirely comfortable with this arrangement. More than half of CEOs questioned said that their CFO would not make a good COO, and only 17% said that those already taking on some organizational responsibilities would be good in an official COO position. There are two main reasons for this disconnect: the difficulty in seeing CFOs outside a traditional accounting role; and the feeling (correct or not) that they don’t have the right people skills.

    WHAT INNOVATION FORGOT

    Bill Gates Will Give You $100,000 to Make a Better Condom (Mashable)

    Around 750 million people use condoms, but they’ve pretty much stayed the same for decades. That’s why the Gates Foundation is promising $100,000 in funding, with the potential of up to $1 million in total, to the person or company that can best rethink both the male and female prophylactics. When it comes to male condoms, the foundation is looking for a product that finds “some way to increase sensation as to get men to wear them more often.” For female condoms, simplicity and ease of use are key. For all of the above, “ideas that prove too expensive for widespread use in the developing world, or those that don’t do the job of preventing pregnancy or disease transmission will be dismissed right off the bat.”

    BONUS BITS:

    You Can’t Get There From Here

    The Anatomy of a Parking Sign You Can Actually See (Atlantic Cities)
    Imagine Cities Without Highways (Fast Company)
    Should Heavy Airline Passengers Pay More? (CNN Travel)

  • Audioair Wants To Unlock Audio From Muted TVs Everywhere And Give Your Local Bar A New Way To Advertise

    Screen Shot 2013-03-19 at 2.14.12 PM

    If you’ve ever been in a sports bar with your friends to watch a big game, you’ve likely run into the “muting” problem. While the bar may have two dozen TVs, each might be playing a different game, and there’s either too much sound or none at all. At most local restaurants, bars, airports and health clubs, you’ll find TVs muted for this very reason.

    Some have opted to, say, put speakers on tables in their bars to project sound more directly, but the problem is that this puts a damper on any socializing you planned to do with your friends and fellow bar mates. Might just be me, but repeatedly yelling “WHAT DID YOU SAY?!” over the audio can detract from the viewing experience. After all, you’re really there to enjoy some quality time with friends — the thrilling play-by-play isn’t the only attraction.

    Durango, Colorado-based Airborne Media is hoping to offer another solution with a new product called Audioair, which aims to turn smartphones into your own personal listening device to help unlock sound from the tens of millions of muted TVs out there. Essentially, Airborne wants to put its audio solution anywhere an un-muted TV would add to the location’s overall noise pollution — every airport, hospital, sports bar, stadium or health club in the U.S.

    But how does it work, you ask? Users download Audioair’s free mobile app, which taps into the sound system (via Wi-Fi) at any Audioair subscriber location, allowing you to determine which TV you want to listen to, projecting the audio through your smartphone so you can listen from your pocket or through headphones. Airborne is currently piloting its solution at 47 sites, including sports bars, restaurants, student health facilities and even a large resort casino, and plans to be in 800 locations by the end of the third quarter.

    To help get Audioair off the ground, the startup has raised $3 million in seed funding, $1 million of which is convertible debt, from a handful of local investors. But, let’s be honest, creating a personal audio channel for muted TVs has some appeal, but it could be subject to a fairly limited use case. It’s not difficult to imagine significant others and friends the world over not being particularly pleased when, in the middle of a conversation, you throw in your headphones to hear the local play-by-play.

    Plus, Airborne has to convince enough restaurants that it’s a good idea to invest in their on-premise hardware and buy another TV for their in-venue display. How does it hope to accomplish that tall order?

    Airborne believes that its technology can help change the consumer experience within a multitude of these noisy environments and bridge the gap between mobile devices and customer engagement displays. So, not only does it want to provide a better audio experience for the end user, it wants to act as an interactive social networking experience and dedicated, location-based advertising network for bars, restaurants and any local venue.

    The service allows users to chat with other people in the venue directly through the Audioair app, along with checking-in and adding content from their phones to the sports bar’s local network. This adds a social networking element to the end-user experience; in the meantime, Audioair allows venues to display local advertising on the user’s phone or on a 42-inch digital display that they install in the bar.

    At the outset, the startup has been offering discounts on the cost of the TV (and the installations themselves) to reduce friction for early customer acquisition, but the idea is that — once/if this catches on, bars will be paying for the cost out of their own pockets.

    Audioair charges a monthly fee, which will be an add-on to the fees bars are already paying to DirectTV and so on for cable, but the idea is that the product can help venues reduce the perceived (and actual cost) by helping them attract more customers who stay on the premises longer — because they can actually hear the sound of the game.

    On top of that, bars can distribute on-site promotions through Audioair’s digital display and mobile app, facilitating increased spend, while engaging customers in an in-bar, interactive social and ad network.

    Venues can then share in the ad revenue gained from their displays, while receiving analytics on how customers are interacting, what they’re sharing and so on. They can also disseminate the needed info publicly or privately as needed (think personalized hospital, airport alerts).

    The Airborne Media founders said that they see revenue coming from three buckets — advertising, installation and licensing — with revenue initially coming from subscription and installation and advertising revenue becoming the main stream over time. As to the licensing piece, the team says that they’ve filed for eight patents on their system (which are currently pending), which could help them manufacture some defensibility for a model that could become vulnerable to competition from big players as prices on hardware continue to drop.

    Audioair also tries to sweeten the deal by providing an optional on-site server to manage the local, network and cloud-based content and, by splitting a portion of the advertising revenue with the owner, the startup wants to help them cover the cost of the subscription fee and grow their own revenues over time.

    The Audioair creators also believe they have a leg up on the competition because it has inked a partnership deal with one of the original commercial DirecTV installers, which has exclusive territory rights to a big chunk of real estate — from Florida to Washington, D.C. It provides DirecTV service and support to over 5,000 restaurants and will be helping Airborne make installations throughout its territory, which the founders believe will be critical to helping it expand its footprint.

    Again, it seems like a niche play, but if something like this is going to work, it could be a multi-pronged approach that’s not only an audio helper but a local information and advertising system, complete with hardware support and revenue sharing. There are 38,000 sports bars and restaurants in the U.S., 28,000 health clubs and plenty of airports, casinos and college campuses where Audioair could potentially have some appeal.

    If the startup is able to keep its prices from stifling those venues that are willing to give it a try — and surmount the potential “this is too complicated” reaction from local venues — while offering real value-add on the advertising side (and some better design of its mobile interface), there’s a chance Audioair could have some real legs.

  • Boxee TV gets DLNA, 3-D streaming and more

    Boxee is rolling out a firmware update to its Boxee TV that brings DLNA functionality, 3-D streaming of Vudu titles, a more traditional TV guide, improved DVR scheduling and other features to the device. Owners of Boxee TV devices were notified of the update late Tuesday and told that it would be available to them within the next three days.

    DLNA will enable Boxee TV owners to play files stored on their computers or network-attached storage drives, a feature that was at the core of Boxee’s original Boxee Box. Boxee TV also functions as a DLNA digital media renderer, meaning that users can beam music and videos straight from their mobile device to their Boxee TV, much in the same way as one would stream a video via Airplay to an Apple TV.

    Boxee TV combines apps for online media services like Netflix, YouTube and Spotify with live over-the-air television and a cloud DVR that offers unlimited storage for recorded shows.

    Cloud DVR functionality is currently just available in a limited number of markets, and it looks like Boxee was trying to iron out some bugs and add some much-needed features before rolling it out further. One example: Boxee TV users can now schedule recordings directly on the device. Previously, users had to go to Boxee’s cloud DVR website to schedule a recording – a step that seemed overly complicated for a pretty basic feature of a DVR.

    Check out my Boxee TV unboxing video below:

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Over 200 physicians from UCLA Health named to 2013 Best Doctors in America list

    In further recognition of UCLA Health’s reputation for world-class patient care, more than 200 UCLA physicians have been named to the prestigious Best Doctors in America list for 2013.
     
    The national list, which is compiled every two years by Boston-based Best Doctors Inc., is based on an in-depth, impartial peer survey of doctors working in a variety of specialties. Only the top 5 percent of physicians in the country receive this honor.
     
    “Earning a place as one of the Best Doctors in America is a singular honor,” said Dr. David Feinberg, president of UCLA Health. “This is a testament to our physicians, who provide excellent patient-centered care. We are grateful to our gifted and dedicated medical team throughout UCLA Health, which goes the extra mile every day to save lives and deliver compassionate care to patients in our community, one patient at a time.”
     
    For its list, Best Doctors conducts an exhaustive, peer-reviewed survey of the medical profession, polling more than 50,000 doctors across the U.S. and asking them this question: If you or a loved one needed a doctor in your specialty, to whom would you refer?
     
    The doctors surveyed are asked to provide an assessment of the clinical abilities of their peers within more than 400 sub-specialties of medicine. The millions of individual data points collected through this process are compiled using algorithms that correct for statistical bias, yielding the list of the physicians deemed the “best” by their peers. The list identifies specialists who are considered by fellow physicians to be the most skilled in their fields and most qualified for reviewing and treating complex medical conditions.
     
    The goal of the Best Doctors in America list is to identify the best trained, most experienced and most skilled specialists, regardless of where they practice, according to Best Doctors Inc.
     
    UCLA’s world-class specialists made it into every specialty category listed in the Best Doctors database. UCLA Health’s group of experts listed in the database includes world-class heart, pediatrics, neurology and neurosurgery specialists.
     
    Learn more about the Best Doctors list and see the UCLA physicians who made the 2013 list.
     
    For further information, visit Best Doctors at www.bestdoctors.comTwitterFacebook and LinkedIn, or call 800-223-5003.
     
    Best Doctors Inc., founded in 1989 by Harvard Medical School physicians, works with the best 5 percent of doctors, ranked by impartial peer review, to help people get the right diagnosis and right treatment. Gallup has audited and certified Best Doctors Inc.’s database of physicians and its companion Best Doctors in America List as using the highest industry standards survey methodology and processes. The global health solutions company, which has grown to over 30 million members worldwide, uses state-of-the-art technology capabilities to deliver improved health outcomes while reducing costs. Best Doctors seamlessly integrates its trusted health services with large self-insured employers, insurers and other groups in every major region of the world. The company also designs and implements international insurance programs that help people be sure they get the right health solutions. 
     
    The UCLA Health System, which comprises the UCLA Hospital System and the UCLA Medical Group and its affiliates, has provided a high quality of health care and the most advanced treatment options to the people of Los Angeles and the world for more than half a century. Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital at UCLA, Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA, and UCLA Medical Center, Santa Monica (which includes the Los Angeles Orthopaedic Hospital) deliver hospital care that is unparalleled in California. Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center is consistently ranked one of the top five hospitals in the nation and the best in the western United States by U.S. News & World Report. UCLA physicians and hospitals continue to be world leaders in the full range of care, from maintaining the health of families to the diagnosis and treatment of complex illnesses.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • DHS excuses for buying so much ammo don’t add up

    Just move along, folks. There’s nothing to see here. That’s the attitude of the Department of Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano when it comes to scrutiny of her agency’s massive purchase requests for billions – that’s right, billions – of rounds of ammunition…
  • Inflammatory bowel disease linked to higher rates of processed meat consumption

    A growing number of studies are implicating high dietary intake of meat and omega-6 fatty acids as a significant risk factor in the development of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, while also suggesting that higher vitamin…
  • Money-hungry cancer centers red-flagged for refusing patients and skewing survival rates

    Being diagnosed with cancer is perhaps the most emotionally traumatic thing that can happen to someone. What’s more, it is a diagnosis that leads to a feeling of desperation as patients search in vain for any and all available treatment options, with many, if not most…