Old Articles: <Older 471-480 Newer> |
|
The Motley Fool August 11, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Baby Breaker Birth Announcements We track the week in private equity in search of investments of the future. Digium... Ruckus Network... |
BusinessWeek August 14, 2006 |
A Green Field Since 2001, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers has invested $100 million in green technology startups. Here's a look at some of the investments. |
The Motley Fool August 7, 2006 S.J. Caplan |
Scouting the Latest IPOs An investor's roundup of new-issue hits, misses, and no-shows. Osiris Therapeutics... Security Capital Assurance... Buckeye GP Holdings ... Aircastle Limited... etc. |
Bio-IT World Jul/Aug 2006 Michael A. Greeley |
Monsoon of Capital The private equity markets, both venture capital and growth equity, while characterized by a number of established firms, continue to struggle with how best to finance early-stage, risky bio-IT companies. |
InternetNews August 4, 2006 Paul Shread |
Kazeon Files Away $21 Million Kazeon has turned its early success in the information classification management space into big bucks. It will will announce a $21 million second round of funding. |
The Motley Fool August 4, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Baby Breaker Birth Announcements We track the week in private equity in search of investments of the future. EnterpriseDB... Weather Trends International... |
Registered Rep. August 1, 2006 Kristen French |
PIPE Up Private investments in public equity financings are on a tear this year. Through July 18, PIPE financings totaled 1,081, amounting to $24.7 billion. Investment bankers say the instruments are going mainstream. |
Inc. August 2006 Alex Salkever |
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? The new alternative to banks and VCs: person-to-person lending. |
Inc. August 2006 |
The Prosper Diaries Landing a loan on Prosper isn't always easy. Here's how one business owner navigated the process. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2006 Tekla S. Perry |
Silicon Valley 2.0 (Beta) These engineers and computer scientists missed the dot-com boom -- and the bust. But they say that the time to start a tech company is now and that Silicon Valley is the place to do it. |
<Older 471-480 Newer> Return to current articles. |