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Vista
Ventures Announces $60M in Available Funding
Licenses helping Colorado
venture capital companies in tech sector
By
Katie Ford, Camera Business Writer
March 11, 2003
The pot of
startup money available for Colorado technology companies got bigger Monday,
after a year when venture capital funding was down significantly in Colorado.
Broomfield-based Vista Ventures announced it secured a Small Business Investment
Company license from the U.S. Small Business Administration, allowing the
venture capital company to invest more than $60 million in new capital.
Catharine
Merigold, general partner with Vista Ventures, said the SBA program was changed
in 1995 to make it attractive to venture funds and to spur increases of jobs in
the technology sector.
But she said
the program has been more selective in the past few years in what companies are
given licenses.
"They've
really raised the bar," she said. "It's very difficult to get this kind of
status these days."
According to
the SBA, seven Colorado companies have SBIC licenses this year including
Cornerstone Ventures in Broomfield and The Roser Partnership in Boulder.
Jay Edwards,
public information officer with the SBA's Colorado office, said the program is
highly popular and designed for technology-related venture firms.
Merigold said
Vista Ventures tries to concentrate on Colorado technology companies, but she
said the money could also go to companies in the Western region of the United
States and to companies with a technology product that aren't specifically
geared toward the high-tech industry.
Merigold
estimated that about 18 to 20 companies will receives funding from Vista
Ventures. She said the company plans to allocate money to one Colorado company
this month and four companies this year. Vista's previous investments include
Boulder-based LeftHand Networks.
The news comes
a few months after a survey reported that Colorado firms raised $547.3 million
in venture funding last year, a sharp decline from the $1.39 billion raised in
2001 and the $4.34 billion raised in 2000.
The MoneyTree
Survey, prepared and released by Pricewaterhouse Coopers, Venture Economics and
the National Venture Capital Association, reported that U.S. firms raised $21.18
billion last year, compared with $41.28 billion in 2001.
John Metzger,
chief executive officer with Boulder-based public relations firm Metzger
Associates and board member with Rockies Venture Club, said the SBIC program
could mean a new step for Colorado venture capital companies.
"I think it's
really a great idea for the government to syndicate small business investment
with venture capital firms," he said. Metzger said the strategy could also lead
to longer investment strategies, giving startups more time to turn profitable.
"I think
venture capital in Colorado and in the country in general needs to start
developing a new position, a new investment strategy," Metzger he said.
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