• For Online Lenders, It’s Suddenly Touch and Go

    Screen Shot 2016-05-26 at 9.45.52 PMA year ago, privately held online lenders like Prosper, SoFi and Avant looked all but certain to go public at the same unicorn valuations their venture investors had assigned them — if not higher. They were seemingly reshaping the student, consumer and small business lending business. The market they’re chasing is enormous: The U.S. consumer lending market is a $3.5 trillion industry, and 22 of  the largest online marketplace platforms originated just more than $5 billion of unsecured consumer credit in 2014 and more than $10 billion in 2015.

    They also talked a big game. When SoFi raised a whopping $1 billion from Softbank last year, CEO Michael Cagney told Bloomberg: “I’m looking at over $1 trillion of market cap from the banks, and I think it’s all vulnerable.”

    Fast forward to today, and it’s online lenders that suddenly look like sitting ducks.

    In an SEC filing Monday, Lending Club, which announced the surprise departure of its founder and CEO last Monday, revealed that investors who “contributed a significant amount of funding” for loans are now examining that performance “or are otherwise reluctant to invest.”

    That’s a huge problem. Lending Club can’t originate a loan until it has sold it to another party.

    It’s not just Lending Club that’s grown overly reliant on institutional sources of capital to keep its business afloat, though the problem is just becoming widely understood now.

    For many casual observers in Silicon Valley, the first signs of trouble in the online lending category emerged in late April, when the WSJ reported that Avant made $514 million worth of new loans in the U.S. in the first quarter, a 27 percent drop from the fourth quarter of 2015. Then, two weeks ago, Prosper confirmed that it planned to cut roughly 28 percent of its staff in response to falling loan volume. And Prosper’s news came just a day after OnDeck Capital said its own first-quarter losses had more than doubled as demand for its loans began to nosedive.

    Of course, the kicker came last week, when Lending Club CEO Renaud LaPlanche resigned following an internal audit that turned up $22 million in loans that were sold to Jefferies yet didn’t meet the investment bank’s criteria.

    Fast growth, big risks

    If the shift in the companies’ fortunes seemed abrupt to Silicon Valley, it wasn’t a surprise to many in the financial industry. They’ll tell you they’ve seen this movie before.

    Online lending “grew incredibly quickly from loan volumes of almost nothing eight years ago to many billions of dollars a year,” says Max Wolff, chief economist at Manhattan Venture Partners, a merchant banking firm in New York. “But what started out as a disruptive movement known as peer-to-peer was far more novel than what it became, which, in many cases, is a front for whoever is providing [some of these startups with] capital to lend.”

    Think banks like Goldman Sachs and Jefferies. Think hedge funds and insurance companies.

    The obvious benefit of taking capital from larger institutions is that they allow online lending companies to grow, and quickly. While companies operating in this space come with inherent advantages — they use automated loan applications; they have no retail branches; they use electronic data sources and tech-enabled underwriting models that help them to quickly identify a borrower’s credit risk — having deep-pocketed friends has made other things easier. Among them is being able to provide funding decisions within 48 to 72 hours, and to offer small loans with short-term maturities.

    Until recently, Wall Street has happily obliged. And why wouldn’t it? With interest rates so low for so long, these new lending products have been an attractive place to generate revenue. Some online lenders — whose customers include small businesses, consumers, and students — have charged more than 60 percent in annual interest on their loans, including origination fees.

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: May 17, 2016

    Hi, everyone. It is Tuesday!

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    Top News in the A.M.

    According to a new New York Times report, Chinese authorities are “quietly scrutinizing technology products sold in China by Apple and other big foreign companies, focusing on whether they pose potential security threats to the country and its consumers and opening up a new front in an already tense relationship with Washington over digital security.” More here.

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    Debra Lee, Chairman and CEO of BET, Joins Twitter’s Board

    Debra Lee, who has been CEO of Viacom’s Black Entertainment Television (BET) since 2005 and its chairman since 2006, has joined the board of Twitter. She tweeted out the news yesterday afternoon, writing, “Thrilled to be joining the @twitter board. It’s transformed the media and the world like few other things in history (and continues to)!!”

    Lee has been with BET for most of her career, joining in 1986 as a VP and the company’s general counsel. She has also been the company’s chief operating officer and served as its president in the ensuing years. Prior to joining BET, she spent five years as an attorney with the Washington, D.C.-based law firm Steptoe & Johnson.

    She joins two other women on the board of Twitter. British businesswoman Martha Lane Fox was appointed to the board last month, along with Hugh Johnston, vice chairman and CFO of PepsiCo.

    In late 2013, the company also appointed former publishing executive Marjorie Scardino to its board. Indeed, following the company’s annual shareholder meeting on May 25, Scardino will preside over meetings of Twitter’s independent directors, approve proposed meeting agendas and schedules, and call meetings of the board or independent directors.

    More here.

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    New Fundings

    Allurion, a six-year-old, Wellesley, Ma.-based startup that makes a non-invasive gastric balloon that can be swallowed and expands in the stomach, has raised $6 million in new funding from Romulus Capital, bringing its total funding to date to $11 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    Agenovir Corporation, a year-old, South San Francisco, Ca.-based company that’s using computationally engineered nuclease technology to develop antiviral therapeutics, has raised $10.6 million in Series A funding led by Data Collective, with participation from Celgene Corporation, Lightspeed Venture Partners and individual investors. More here.

    Avanan, a two-year-old, New York City-based cloud security platform company, has raised $14.9 million in Series A funding led by Greenfield Cities Holdings, with participation from earlier backers Magma VC and StageOne Ventures. The company has now raised $16.4 million altogether. More here.

    Bark & Co, a four-year-old, New York-based e-commerce startup focused around dog products, has raised a whopping $60 million in funding led byAugust Capital, with participation from earlier backers RRE Ventures and Resolute Ventures. The company has now raised $77 million to date. The WSJ has more here.

    BigPanda, a four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based data science platform, has raised an additional $5 million in Series B financing, bringing its newest round to $21 million. Pelion Venture Partners is the newest investor of the group; earlier backers include Sequoia Capital, Battery Ventures, and Mayfield. The company has now raised $30 million altogether. More here.

    Embroker, a year-old, San Francisco-based risk and insurance management platform that helps businesses select and purchase commercial insurance, has raised $12.2 million in Series A funding led by Canaan Partners, with participation from Nyca Partners and XL Innovate, as well as a new debt facility from Silicon Valley Bank. Earlier backers Bee Partners, FinTech Collective, Vertical Venture Partners, and 500 Startups also joined the round. More here.

    Hundredrooms, a two-year-old, Palma, Mallorca-based vacation rental search engine, has raised €4.1 million ($4.7 million) in Series A funding led by Seaya Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Inveready, Bankinter, and Media Digital Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Mitochon Pharmaceuticals, a two-year-old, Blue Bell, Pa.-based biotech company that focuses on developing drugs which target the mitochondria for a host of serious diseases, has raised $1.6 million in funding from Ben Franklin Technology Partners and private investors. More here.

    Nift, a year-old, Boston-based invitation-only network for neighborhood businesses, has raised $3 million in funding co-led by Spark Capital and Accomplice. More here.

    PerfectlySoft, a year-old, Ontario, Canada-based creator of a server-side Swift development framework, has raised $1.2 million in seed funding led by Impression Ventures. More here.

    Purigen Biosystems, a four-year-old, Pleasanton, Ca.-based company that’s developing a platform for the extraction and purification of nucleic acids from biological samples, has raised $18.2 million in Series A funding from 5AM Ventures, Roche Venture Fund and earlier backers Stanford-Startx Fund and Western Investments Capital. More here.

    Q4, a nine-year-old, Toronto, Canada-based market intelligence and investor engagement platform (it manages investor websites and earnings webcasting, among other things), has raised $22 million in Series B funding from OpenText Enterprise Apps Fund, Information Venture Partners, HarbourVest Partners, Emerillon Capital, Kensington Capital Partners, Plaza Ventures and Accomplice. More here.

    Teckst, a 1.5-year-pld, New York-based service that enables two-way text messaging for customer service teams, has raised $2.5 million in new funding from Composite Capital, Gaingels, Kernel Capital and Zelkova Ventures. VentureBeat has more here.

    True Anthem, an 8.5-year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes real-time analytics and social publishing software for the media industry, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from WorldQuant Ventures, an angel investment firm. More here.

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    New Funds

    Breakout Ventures, which looks to be a new venture firm associated with Peter Thiel’s Breakout Labs (which provides grants to nascent science companies) is raising a debut fund, shows an SEC filing. No target is listed, but the form lists as the managing partner Lindy Fishburne, the executive director of Breakout Labs.

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    People

    In the latest sign of Facebook’s prestige and influence, the social network has lured tech-savvy U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Grewal away from the bench and into the company as an in-house lawyer. Fortune has more here.

    A legal battle between the managers of Xfund has entered a newly intense and bitter phase, with Hugo Van Vuuren, co-founder and general partner of Xfund, suing his partner, Patrick Chung, for breach of fiduciary duty, defamation and fraud. More here.

    Inside the elite startup retreat where Satya Nadella and Condoleezza Rice just spent their weekend.

    Watch out, Invisalign. College student Amos Dudley just 3D printed his own braces for $60.

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    Data

    LPs continue to enjoy robust returns from both PE and VC, receiving $342 billion and $46.4 billion in distributions, respectively, in the first three quarters of last year, according to Pitchbook’s latest benchmarking and fund performance report. For venture capital, 2015 remains on pace to be the biggest year ever for venture measured by cash flows.

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    Essential Reads

    FindFace, launched two months ago and currently taking Russia by storm, allows users to photograph people in a crowd and work out their identities, with 70 percent reliability.

    Snapchat isn’t investing in developing regions. Its approach to growth is to only focus on users of value to advertisers in regions with good Internet services, reports The Information.

    Twitter will soon stop counting photos and links as part of its 140-character limit for messages, reports Bloomberg.

    Want a self-driving car? Big-rig trucks may come first.

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    Detours

    Why smart kids shouldn’t use laptops in class.

    Foods you should stop refrigerating already.

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    Retail Therapy

    The Hoxton, Amsterdam. (H/T: Uncrate.)

    What better way to say, “Bon voyage!”

  • StrictlyVC: May 16, 2016

    Hi, welcome back, everyone! Hope your Monday is off to a fine start.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    A new report from the San Jose Mercury News claims that Tesla used cheap foreign labor to build its newest facilities, paying workers as little as $5 an hour, according to one electrician who talked with the outlet.

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    New Fundings

    AtScale, a three-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based startup that aims to make business intelligence work easily on Hadoop, has raised $11 million in Series B funding led by Comcast Ventures, with participation from UMC, AME Ventures, Storm Ventures and XSeed Capital. NetworkWorld has more here.

    CircleCI, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based software platform that aims to help developers rapidly release code for web and mobile apps, has raised $18 million in Series B funding led by Scale Venture Partners. Earlier investors DFJ, Baseline Ventures, and Harrison Metal also joined the round. The company has now raised $28 million altogether. More here.

    DalCor Pharmaceuticals, a year-old, Montreal-based developer of cardiovascular disease treatments that genetically targets patients, has raised $100 million in Series B funding from Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, the Fonds de solidarité FTQ and CTI Life Sciences, along with earlier backers Sanderling Ventures and André Desmarais. The company had previously raised $50 million late last year. More here.

    Irras, a four-year-old, Stockholm, Sweden-based commercial-stage med tech company whose devices aim to address a broad range of brain pathology therapeutic applications and procedures, has raised $11.3 million in funding from Serendipity/Ixora, The Vandel Group, and unnamed, individual healthcare investors in Sweden. More here.

    PebblePost, a two-year-old, New York-based programmatic direct mail platform, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Greycroft Partners and Tribeca Venture Partners, with full participation from earlier individual investors. The company has now raised $8 million to date. New York Business Journal has more here.

    Properati, a 3.5-year-old, Buenos Aires, Argentina-based online real estate platform, has raised $2 million in funding from Neveq II, NXTP Labs, and Telor International Limited. FinSMEs has more here.

    Renovo Financial, a five-year-old, Chicago, Il.-based private lender that assists real estate investors who acquire, renovate and manage residential properties, has raised $25 million from earlier investor Victory Park Capital, which has now committed $75 million to the company altogether. More here.

    Taobao Mobile, the two-year-old, Hangzhou, China-based online movie ticketing platform unit of Alibaba Group’s film and TV subsidiary, Alibaba Pictures, has raised $260 million in Series A funding led by Ant Financial (also an Alibaba affiliate), CDH Investments, and Sina.com, with participation fromHehe Pictures, BONA Film and Huace Media. TechCrunch has more here.

    Zeality, a two-year-old, Pleasanton, Ca.-based startup that’s creating an ecosystem for creators and brands that want to create virtual reality content for end-users, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Rothenberg Ventures; Paraag Marathe, chief strategy officer of the San Francisco 49ers; and Jason Khalipa, owner of NC Fit. More here.

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    New Funds

    WI Harper Group, a 20-year-old, San Francisco-based venture firm focused on expansion-stage, cross-border investing between the U.S. and greater China, has raised $174.3 million for its eight fund, shows a new SEC filing. The firm last closed on two funds in 2011. Its seventh fund closed with $110 million; a fund that it co-manages with Innovation Works (called Innovation Works Development Fund), separately closed with $180 million in 2011.

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    IPOs

    Oncobiologics, a 5.5-year-old, Cranbury, N.J.-based developer of biosimilar therapeutics, raised $35 million in its IPO late last week. The company priced 5.8 million shares at $6 per share, down from the $11 to $13 per share where the company originally planned to price its shares. (The shares fell another 20 percent by the end of the day Friday.) The outlet 24/7 Wall St. has more here.

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    Exits

    AT&T is acquiring Quickplay Media, a 13-year-old, Toronto-based provider of Internet-video streaming services, which it will use to launch three over-the-top DirecTV services later in 2016. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. Quickplay was acquired in 2012 for $100 million by the private equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners. (QuickPay had raised roughly $43 million from VCs before that sale.) Variety has more here.

    Pfizer is acquiring 14-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based Anacor Pharmaceuticals in a deal valued at $5.2 billion net of cash. Anacor’s most important product is a non-steroidal gel used to treat eczema that’s currently under review by the FDA. Under the terms of the agreement, a subsidiary of Pfizer will acquire Anacor for $99.25 a share in cash. That represents a 55 percent premium over Anacor’s closing stock price from Friday. Dealbook has more here.

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    People

    Legendary investor Warren Buffett is putting his money behind a consortium of investors that’s bidding on Yahoo, reports Reuters. The group is led by Quicken Loans founder Dan Gilbert, who’s being advised for former Yahoos Dan Rosensweig and Tim Cadogan, says Recode.

    Watch: Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg‘s powerful and emotional commencement speech on building resilience.

    The family office of Eric and Wendy Schmidt is building a new, 25,000-square-foot, ultra-green office building in Menlo Park, Ca., to house their various charitable endeavors.

    Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel has purchased a Brentwood, Ca., home with model Miranda Kerr for $12 million (down from its listing price of $12.5 million). Business Insider has more here.

    Jason Spinell, former head of venture investing at the now defunct consulting firm Undercurrent, has joined Slack to help manage and invest the fund, per Spinell’s LinkedIn account. (H/T: Dan Primack of Fortune.)

    Robby Stein, who has led mobile and video strategy in New York for Yahoo for the last several years, has accepted a role with Instagram’s product leadership team, reports Recode. More here.

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    Essential Reads

    Amazon is preparing to launch more products — from food to detergent — under its own brand names, says the WSJ.

    Google is facing record-breaking fine for monopoly abuse, as officials in Brussels finish a seven-year investigation of the company’s dominant search engine. The Telegraph has more here.

    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway took a new $1 billion position in Apple in the first quarter, according to a new regulatory filing.

    A company that’s running itself without executives or managers or a board of directors has just raked in more than $107 million through a crowdfunding effort.

    —–

    Detours

    Why movie theaters smell like people’s feelings.

    How long will a museum visitor typically stand before a masterpiece? About 28 seconds, according to a recent study.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    A 1974 VW Bug with just 56 miles on its odometer.

  • StrictlyVC: May 13, 2016

    Aaaand we’re back in SF! Happy Friday, everyone! Hope you have a stellar weekend.

    (We were offline most of yesterday, so no column today.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Big deal. Didi Chuxing (formerly called Didi Kuaidi), China’s top-ride hailing app, has raised $1 billion in strategic funding from a little company called Apple. CEO Tim Cook says Apple is making the investment for a “number of strategic reasons, including a chance to learn more about certain segments of the China market. Of course, we believe it will deliver a strong return for our invested capital as well.” More here.

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    New Fundings

    Accion Systems, a three-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company that’s developing miniature space propulsion systems using penny-size ion engines, has raised $7.5 million in Series A funding led by Shasta Ventures. RRE Ventures, Founder Collective, and Slow Ventures also participated in the round. The company had previously raised $2 million from seed funding and $6.5 million from partnerships with the Department of Defense. TechCrunch has more here.

    Astrobotic Technology, a nine-year-old, Pittsburgh, Pa.-based company that plans to deliver payloads to the moon (it originally spun out of Carnegie Mellon University), has raised $2.5 million in seed funding led by Space Angels Network. TechCrunch has more here.

    Bigcommerce, a seven-year-old, Austin- and Australia-based start-up whose software-as-a-service helps more than 55,000 companies create and manage their online stores has raised $30 million financing round led by GGV Capital. DealStreetAsia has more here.

    Capital Float, a three-year-old, Bangalore, India-based online lending platform for small businesses, has raised $25 million in Series B funding led by Creation Investments, with participation from returning investors SAIF PartnersSequoia Capital and Aspada. TechCrunch has more here.

    EnBiotix, a four-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based bioengineering startup focused on combatting drug-resistant and drug-tolerant bacterial infections, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series A funding from  Wired Holdings Investment Corp. and Apeiron Holdings. More here.

    EndoStim, a seven-year-old, St. Louis, Mo.-based company that makes a neurostimulation therapy device for gastroesophageal reflux disease, has raised $25 million in Series D funding led by Endeavour Vision, with participation from Wellington Partners, GIMV and return backer Santé Ventures. Mass Device has more here.

    Evaneos, a seven-year-old, Paris-based European travel marketplace, has raised $21 million in its third round of funding, from Serena Capital, Fonds Ambition Numérique (managed by Bpifrance), ISAI and XAnge. The company has now raised around $28 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    Medal, a year-old, San Francisco-based online platform for unifying medical records, has raised $3.78 million in new funding, shows an SEC filing first flagged by Fortune. Investors aren’t disclosed on the form. According to CrunchBase, the company had raised an undisclosed amount of angel funding roughly a year ago, including from Lee Linden, who heads up Facebook’s emerging initiatives in commerce. More here.

    Viridity Energy, a seven-year-old, Philadelphia, Pa.-based company that makes battery storage and demand response products, has raised $8.5 million in new funding from AltEnergy. More here.

    —-

    New Funds

    In a bid to make South Korea’s tech industry more diverse, the government has created an accelerator for startups from around the world. Called the K-Startup Grand Challenge, the program is being organized by South Korea’s Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (MSIP), in partnership with Seoul-based accelerators SparkLabs, DEV Korea, ActnerLab, and Shift. It will accept applications through June 14. More here.

    VSL Partners, a two-year-old, San Fransisco-based investment firm that make loans to stockholders of pre-IPO companies, has raised $17.7 million for its second fund, according to an SEC filing that shows a $50 million target. The firm began its fundraising last fall. VSL was cofounded by David Crowder, a co-founder and longtime general partner Thomas Weisel Venture Partners, which was a $250 million early-stage venture fund.

    —–

    IPOs

    Acacia Communications, a Maynard, Ma.-based fiber optics component maker, went public this morning and its shares are soaring. The biggest shareholders heading into the IPO included Matrix Partners, which owned 39.2 percent of the company, Commonwealth Capital Ventures, which owned 19.7 percent, and Summit Partners, which owned 9.4 percent. Barron’s has more here.

    China Online Education Group filed an F-1 form with the SEC for an IPO. No pricing details were given in the filing, but the offering was valued up to $100 million. The company has yet to decide on which exchange to list its American depositary shares. The outlet 24/7 Wall St. has the story here.

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    People

    Sunny Balwani, the president and chief operating officer of Theranos, the beleaguered medical diagnostics startup, is stepping down as the company reorganizes its structure. More here.

    In an interview yesterday, billionaire investor Mark Cuban likened Trump to a drunk and a womanizer and said his campaign is “like a Seinfeld episode,” meaning that it’s about nothing. Apparently, despite these views, he’s supporting Trump for president.

    Magic Johnson, the Hall of Fame basketball player and businessman, has left Square’s board, saying he decided to resign owing to time constraints with other projects on which he is working.

    Evan Spiegel wants everyone to use his messaging app, Snapchat. He meanwhile “tries to stay off the grid,” reports Recode, which says Spiegel “shares very little with very few, a practice that has come to define his role at Snapchat and the company’s underlying culture.”

    Elizabeth Weil, who started Twitter’s corporate development team in 2009 and spent the last three years at Andreessen Horowitz, introducing its portfolio companies to key contacts at Fortune 500 companies, has joined 137 Ventures as a managing partner. Fortune has the story here.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says he wants to invite “leading conservatives and people from across the political spectrum” to discuss recent reports that its “Trending Topics” feature is biased against conservatives.

    How the 1 percent parties, in pictures.

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    Essential Reads

    New crowdfunding rules taking effect Monday will allow anyone to invest in startups—not just wealthy people.

    Google is moving beyond Cardboard and introducing a standalone Android VR headset next week.

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    Detours

    The amazing pancakes of Dr. Dancakes.

    Where in the U.S. the middle class is shrinking and the upper class is growing.

    Living in the fast lane apparently will kill you.

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    Retail Therapy

    Fender — now owned by TPG Growth and Servco Pacific — just released headphones that double as in-ear monitors for performers. More here.

    Bad Affleck is coming back, this November.

  • StrictlyVC: May 11, 2016

    It is Wednesday and we are done interviewing people on stage! (Phew. It’s always a little nerve-wracking.)

    If of interest, can check out our sit-down here with legendary Wall Street exec Sallie Krawcheck, who just took the wraps off her new financial advisory firm Ellevest. You can also check out our interview with Honest Company cofounder Jessica Alba and her chief marketing officer, Chris Thorne, right here. We covered a lot of ground, from the lawsuits facing the company, to the company’s IPO plans, to a new line of products coming this fall that are centered around hair products.

    Note: We’ll be on a flight back to SF early tomorrow so won’t be able to write SVC, but we’ll return to our regularly scheduled programming on Friday.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Google announced today that it will no longer allow payday lenders to advertise on its systems because the loans often come with high interest rates and quick repayment requirements that push borrowers into debt. More here.

    Instagram has a new look today.

    —–

    Naspers Plants a Flag in the U.S. with New Venture Group

    Naspers, the 101-year-old, internet and entertainment group, is finally planting a flag in the U.S., establishing a Naspers Ventures unit that will operate largely out of San Francisco.

    The 30,000-person company, which is based in Cape Town, South Africa and tends to focus on less developed markets, including Latin America, Africa, India and even Russia, said its decision to come to the U.S., owes to a few factors.

    The first is organizational. Though Naspers is one of the most active investors in the world – it committed $1.5 billion to companies last year, including Avito, an online classified ads company in Moscow — the company has created smaller operating companies around certain sectors where it has a wealth of bets. Some of those sectors and bets include e-commerce (Flipkart), online retail (Allegro), online classifieds (including Mail.ru and OLX), social networking (Tencent), and payments (PayU).

    “We’ve gotten well-represented in those areas,” says Naspers CEO Bob van Dijk. “But we also realized that to prepare for our next phase of growth, we want to be focused on other, new consumer needs that are being transformed by tech.” And to do it via a dedicated ventures unit.

    Indeed, this morning, Naspers Ventures is announcing it has led a $15 million Series B investment in the social learning network Brainly — a deal that represents the first ed tech investment for Naspers. (Seven-year-old Brainly was founded in Kraków, Poland and now has a second office in New York.)

    More here.

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    New Fundings

    ConnXus, a six-year-old, Cincinnati, Oh.-based company whose tech platform helps connect large corporations with minority- and women-owned suppliers, has raised $5 million in Series A funding from Techstars Ventures, Serious Change and Impact America Fund. Cincinnati.com has more here.

    Drayson Technologies, a nine-year-old, London-based startup whose technology harvests energy from radio frequency signals to potentially power a range of low-consumption devices, has raised £8 million ($11.6 million) in Series B funding led by earlier backers Lansdowne Partners and Woodford Investment Management, with participation from new, unnamed investors and the company’s staff. TechCrunch has more here.

    Orderbird, a five-year-old, Berlin-based company that claims to be the leading iPad point-of-sale solution in German-speaking markets, has raised €20 million ($22.8 million) in Series C funding co-led by Digital+ Partners and Metro Group. The European payment-provider Concardis, an earlier backer, also participated again but via a secondary listing. TechCrunch has more here.

    Soracom, a 1.5-year-old, Tokyo-based startup that provides a communication platform for developers of connected devices, announced today that it has raised a 2.4 billion yen (about $22 million) Series B from World Innovation Lab, Infinity Venture Partners, and other investors. The money will be used to enter the United States and other markets. TechCrunch has more here.

    Weaveworks, a 1.5-year-old, London-based startup that’s creating open source tools for managing, monitoring and securing containers, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by GV, with participation from earlier backer Accel Partners. The company has now raised $20 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

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    New Funds

    Cherry Ventures, a Berlin-based venture firm, has raised a new €150 million early-stage fund, its second. Cherry focuses on seed and early-stage startups, with a particular focus on Berlin’s tech hub and companies in the consumer space. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Elon Musk‘s Hyperloop dream is about to have its first public demo.

    This Peter Thiel business is more serious than we thought.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Venture-backed uBeam could be vaporware, according to a blogger claiming to be uBeam’s former VP of Engineering.

    Uber’s latest attempt to ease concerns about its labor model establishes benefits for drivers but stops short of unionization.

    The most audacious part of Alphabet? Google Fiber, says Recode. Here’s why.

    —–

    Detours

    Why the world’s richest airlines can’t get enough hand-me-down jets.

    —-

    Retail Therapy

    Hotel Jerome. (H/T: Uncrate.)

  • Naspers Plants a Flag in the U.S. with a New Venture Group

    Screen Shot 2016-05-22 at 4.59.51 PMNaspers, the 101-year-old, internet and entertainment group, is finally planting a flag in the U.S., establishing a Naspers Ventures unit that will operate largely out of San Francisco.

    The 30,000-person company, which is based in Cape Town, South Africa and tends to focus on less developed markets, including Latin America, Africa, India and even Russia, said its decision to come to the U.S., owes to a few factors.

    The first is organizational. Though Naspers is one of the most active investors in the world – it committed $1.5 billion to companies last year, including Avito, an online classified ads company in Moscow — the company has created smaller operating companies around certain sectors where it has a wealth of bets. Some of those sectors and bets include e-commerce (Flipkart), online retail (Allegro), online classifieds (including Mail.ru and OLX), social networking (Tencent), and payments (PayU).

    “We’ve gotten well-represented in those areas,” says Naspers CEO Bob van Dijk. “But we also realized that to prepare for our next phase of growth, we want to be focused on other, new consumer needs that are being transformed by tech.” And to do it via a dedicated ventures unit.

    Indeed, this morning, Naspers Ventures is announcing it has led a $15 million Series B investment in the social learning network Brainly — a deal that represents the first ed tech investment for Naspers. (Seven-year-old Brainly was founded in Kraków, Poland and now has a second office in New York.)

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: May 10, 2016

    Hi, all, happy Tuesday!

    We’re still at Disrupt, where Google’s Sridhar Ramaswamy — in charge of Google’s lucrative ad products — is coming up next. We’re also excited to see Uber’s chief advisor David Plouffe take the stage in the next hour or so. A note that we may be a little late in reaching you tomorrow (we have a couple of interviews in the morning).

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Amazon, which touts itself as Earth’s biggest store, has officially launched its bid to be the place to watch any kind of video under the sun. Variety has the story here.

    The world’s largest storage manufacturer, Western Digital, just got bigger, saying this morning that it has cleared all the necessary regulatory hurdles in their planned purchase of SanDisk. Engadget has more here.

    —–

    HP Rolls Out a New Venture Arm

    There’s a new corporate venture arm in town.

    Roughly six months after Hewlett-Packard finalized its division into two companies — Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which focuses on servers, storage, networking and security; and HP Inc., which continues to sell PCs and printers — the latter is introducing a new venture unit called HP Tech Ventures.

    The eight-person team, which ultimately reports up to HP’s CTO Shane Wall, is being led by Andrew Bolwell, who has spent the last 16 years with HP and has held the title of chief disruptor for the last few of them.

    Among his colleagues and cofounders are Irit Hillel, based in Israel, and Vitaly Golomb, who is based alongside Bolwell in Palo Alto.

    In a brief meeting in New York yesterday, Bolwell gave us a few details about HP Tech Ventures’ plans. The idea is to focus primarily on seed and Series A deals that serve HP Inc. strategically. The team will focus on five areas, including: 3D printing and the broader ecosystem that supports it; immersive experiences, including both augmented reality and virtual reality; smart machines, including home and commercial robots; and the Internet of Things.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Bayshore Networks, a four-year-old, Bethesda, Ma.-based company that makes cybersecurity software for the Industrial Internet of Things, has raised $6.6 million in Series A funding from Trident Capital Cybersecurity and earlier angel investors. More here.

    Dyn, an 18-year-old, Manchester, N.H.-based internet performance management company, has raised $50 million in Series B funding led by Pamplona Capital Management. TechCrunch has more here.

    E8 Storage, a 1.5-year-old, Ramat Gan, Israel-based enterprise storage company, has raised $12 million in Series B funding led by Accel Partners, with participation from earlier investors Vertex Partners and Magma Venture Partners. Tech.eu has more here.

    Faircent, a three-year-old, Bangalore, India-based peer-to-peer lending startup, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series A round led by JM Financial, which now owns a 9.8 pecent stake in the company. Earlier backers Aarin Capital Partners and other individual investors have also co-invested in the round. The Economic Times has more here.

    Fluent, a two-year-old, New York-based financial operating network built on blockchain technology, has raised $1.65 million in seed funding led by ff Venture Capital, with participation from Digital Currency Group, Crosscut Ventures, Draper Associates, Fenbushi Capital, Lindbergh Tech Fund, and the St. Louis Arch Angels. The company has now raised $2.5 million altogether. More here.

    MegaBots, a two-year-old, Oakland, Ca.-based company that company that aims to bring the robot-fighting stuff of manga and anime to a venue near you, has raised has raised $2.4 million in seed funding from Azure Capital Partners, AME Cloud Ventures, Autodesk, Maveron, and angel investor Ray Rothrock. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Rancher Labs, a two-year-old, Cupertino, Ca.-based company that makes container management software, has raised $20 million in Series B funding led by GRC SinoGreen, with participation from earlier investors Mayfield and Nexus Venture Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Simplee, a five-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based healthcare expenses startup, has raised $20 million in Series C funding led by Social Capital, with participation from American Express Ventures, as well as earlier investors 83North andHeritage Group, and new investor American Express Ventures. The Globes has more here.

    SPEAKABOOS, an eight-year-old, New York-based company whose app aims to turn “screen time into reading time” for kids ages 2 to 6, has raised $12.5 million in Series B-1 funding led by Wellington Management Company. EdSurge has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    NantHealth, the digital health wing of Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong’s NantWorks portfolio of companies, has registered for an initial public offering. The filing was for a $92 million IPO. MobiHealthNews has more here.

    —–

    Exits

    Indiegogo has acquired Celery, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based “pre-commerce” platform that specializes in sites that are taking product pre-orders. Terms of the deal aren’t being disclosed. Celery had raised $2 million from Y Combinator, SV Angel, and Max Levchin. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Parker Conrad, the Zenefits co-founder who resigned in scandal from the human resources startup, sold stock last year worth $10 million and later negotiated a $130,000 payment as a condition of his resignation, three people with knowledge of the matter told BuzzFeed News. More here.

    Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel, who is one of the top libertarian mega-donors in Republican politics, will apparently be a delegate for Donald Trump.

    The 25 best-paid hedge fund managers took home a collective $12.94 billion in income last year, according to an annual ranking published today by Institutional Investor’s Alpha magazine.

    —–

    Data

    Invest Europe just released its private equity activity report. You can check it out here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    The second round of bidders in the sale of Yahoo have begun holding all-day meetings with Yahoo‘s top management, including CEO Marissa Mayer, reports Recode, whose sources say most of management invariably be replaced. “I cannot imagine a scenario where we keep her,” said one potential buyer of Mayer. “Yahoo will need a clean slate.”

    Gizmodo reported yesterday that human editors at Facebook have been routinely suppressing conservative news sources from the “Trending Topics” section of its site. But Facebook VP of Search Tom Stocky says his team has found “no evidence” that those claims are true.

    At Lending Club, the cover up may have been worse than the crime. CNBC has more here.

    —–

    Detours

    The 10 strangest hoodies ever created.

    Surprising beauty in the world’s most hellish traffic interchanges.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Peter Thiel’s gorgeous mansion in San Francisco’s Marina district has hit the market. Price: $9.2 million.

  • HP Rolls Out a New Venture Arm

    20150903_HP_Garage-103There’s a new corporate venture arm in town.

    Roughly six months after Hewlett-Packard finalized its division into two companies — Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which focuses on servers, storage, networking and security; and HP Inc., which continues to sell PCs and printers — the latter is introducing a new venture unit called HP Tech Ventures.

    The eight-person team, which ultimately reports up to HP’s CTO Shane Wall, is being led by Andrew Bolwell, who has spent the last 16 years with HP and has held the title of chief disruptor for the last few of them.

    Among his colleagues and cofounders are Irit Hillel, based in Israel, and Vitaly Golomb, who is based alongside Bolwell in Palo Alto.

    In a brief meeting in New York yesterday, Bolwell gave us a few details about HP Tech Ventures’ plans. The idea is to focus primarily on seed and Series A deals that serve HP Inc. strategically. The team will focus on five areas, including: 3D printing and the broader ecosystem that supports it; immersive experiences, including both augmented reality and virtual reality; smart machines, including home and commercial robots; and the Internet of Things.

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: May 9, 2016

    Hi, all, hope you had a terrific weekend! We’re in the thick of Disrupt so don’t have a column prepared for you, but you can catch our on-stage interview from earlier this morning with Josh Kopelman of First Round Capital, Andy Weissman of Union Square Ventures, and Chris Douvos of Venture Investment Associates. (The topic, broadly speaking: how in the world institutional investors get paid in today’s market.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Lending Club shares are down more than 25 percent this morning after the company announced that CEO and founder Renaud Laplanche would resign following an internal review of $22 million in near-prime loan sales to a single investor. TechCrunch has more here.

    The lawsuit over the mental competency of the ailing mogul Sumner Redstone was dismissed this morning, after the judge viewed videotaped testimony from the 92-year-old billionaire that was shown on Friday. The New York Times has more here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    CoreOS, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company behind the container-centric CoreOS Linux distribution and Tectonic container management service, has raised $28 million in Series B funding led by GV, with participation from Accel Partners, Fuel Capital, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and the Y Combinator Continuity Fund. The company has now raised $48 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Musikki, a 5.5-year-old, London-based image management and distribution platform, has raised $1 million in fresh funding from Portugal Ventures, the biggest venture firm in Portugal. TechCrunch has more here.

    Pivotal, a three-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based software company that helps its customers build up their own software development capabilities, has raised more than everyone thought. Recode reported last Friday that it had garnered $253 million in Series C funding at a $2.8 billion valuation from FordMicrosoft, EMC, VMware and GE. Turns out that was the tip of the iceberg; according to an SEC filing turned up Friday, the company has received a total of $653 million in new funding. Fortune has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    The private equity firm TPG has announced a final close of its latest North American- and European-focused private equity fund, TPG Partners VII with $10.5 billion in commitments, including $400 million from TPG and its personnel. More here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Talend, a Redwood Shores, Ca.-based software firm that helps corporations organize and analyze data, has hired investment banks for an IPO, say Reuters sources, who tell the outlet that Talend has already registered its IPO confidentially with the SEC. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Bango, the U.K.-based mobile payments company that provides tech to enable consumers to charge app store purchases directly to their phone bill, has acquired the U.S.-based carrier billing service BilltoMobile from Danal for $3.5 million in mostly cash and newly issued Bango shares. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Point72 Asset Management, which manages hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen‘s fortune, has made its first venture investment as it looks to refine investment decisions and improve returns. Reuters has more here.

    Joe Lonsdale, co-founder of Palantir Technologies, has fired back at a report published by Buzzfeed alleging that the data analysis firm he now advises has been struggling. Fortune has more here.

    Ruby Lu, cofounder of DCM China, has joined H Capital, a China-focused venture capital firm founded by Tiger Global Management‘s former China managing partner, Chen Xiaohong. DealStreetAsia has more here.

    John McAfee, America’s favorite (and most entertaining) cybersecurity expert has a new gig. TechCrunch has more here.

    Keith Rabois of Khosla Ventures thinks Uber could go public “at around $25 billion” (and not its private-market valuation of $60 billion) if it were to IPO today.

    Norman Winarsky, the former president of SRI Ventures and co-founder and board member of Siri, has joined Relay Ventures as the firm’s first executive-in-residence.

    —–

    Jobs

    Union Square Ventures is hiring an analyst. The job is in New York. (Work those connections; this is one of the best entry-level gigs in the business.)

    —–

    Data

    The law firm Fenwick & West just analyzed the terms of 148 venture financings closed in the first quarter of 2016 by companies headquartered in Silicon Valley, finding small declines in the number of up rounds, as well as average and median prices. More here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Here’s the first demo of Viv, the next generation AI assistant built by Siri creator Dag Kittlaus.

    Twitter has cut off U.S. intelligence agencies from access to a service that sifts through the entire output of its social-media postings, the latest example of tension between Silicon Valley and the U.S. government. The WSJ has more here.

    The company developing Elon Musk‘s 700 mile-per-hour maglev train has announced new details about the levitation system it plans to use.

    —–

    Detours

    What the science of touch says about us.

    The 50 best dive bars in New York.

    —-

    Retail Therapy

    The perfect customizable sofa system (says Design Milk).

  • StrictlyVC: May 6, 2016

    Hi, everyone, we made it! Happy Friday from beautiful, rainy, hectic New York City. Hope you’re in for a terrific weekend. We’ll see you Monday, after we finish an onstage interview at Disrupt with Josh Kopelman of First Round Capital, Andy Weissman of Union Square Ventures, and Chris Douvos of Venture Investment Associates.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Lyft says it’s rolling out self-driving taxis — next year.

    Square reported first quarter earnings yesterday that beat analysts expectations. Still, its shares fell as much as 20 percent on concerns about financing for its small-business customer-loan program, a service once viewed as a growth area for the company.

    —–

    New York’s ff Venture Capital Just Raised a $54 Million Fund, and It’s Targeting Another

    New York-based venture firm ff Venture Capital, has raised $53.8 million for its fourth seed-stage venture fund, according to an SEC filing that shows fundraising began in the fall of 2014.

    The firm had closed its third seed-stage fund fund in January 2014 with $52 million. Since then, ff Venture Capital has hired two new partners, including Adam Plotkin, who was formerly one of its entrepreneurs-in-residence, and Michael Faber, who’d spent nearly two decades as a general partner with NextPoint VC.

    Earlier (and remaining) partners with the firm include its founder, John Frankel; Alex Katz, who does double duty as the firm’s CFO; and David Teten, who previously cofounded a short-lived data mining and analytics company called Navon Partners.

    Some of ff Venture’s biggest exits in recent years include the learning software maker Cornerstone OnDemand, which went public in 2011; ThinkNear, a hyper-local mobile ad company that sold to Telenav in 2012 for undisclosed terms; and Omek Interactive, which sold to Intel for $40 million in 2013.

    The firm has also seen two of its portfolio companies sell this year. In February, the car service app Whisk sold to the cloud and mobile commerce company Deem, and last week, Livefyre, a portfolio company focused on brand engagement, was acquired by Adobe. Terms of both deals weren’t disclosed publicly.

    ff Venture Capital (the “ff” stands for founder friendly) employs 30 people, including recruiting, PR, and investor relations staff to assist its portfolio companies. Some of those that remain privately held are Indiegogo, Plated, Distil Networks, Ionic Security, and Skycatch.

    Indeed, according to a source familiar with the firm’s plans, ff Venture Capital is still in the fundraising market, with plans to raise a separate “opportunities” fund to invest in the best-performing companies in its existing portfolio. The idea is to invest in 15 of the roughly 85 startups the firm has funded to date across its four early-stage funds.

    —–

    New Fundings

    360fly, a 16-year-old, Pittsburgh, Pa.-based company behind a single-lens camera that captures 360-degree video, has raised $40 million in Series C funding led by L Catterton Backers, with participation from Hydra Ventures, which is the corporate venture arm of Adidas Group. Earlier investor Qualcomm Ventures also joined the round. More here.

    ACT Genomics, a two-year-old, Taipei, Taiwan-based integrated cancer molecular information company, has raised $12.5 million in Series B funding led by Hotung Group and CDIB Capital Management, with participation from earlier investors Eminent II VC, Hua Nan Venture Capital, President International Development and UMC Capital. More here.

    DigiExam, a 4.5-year-old, Stockholm, Sweden-based startup that sells software-as-a-service for academic testing and grading, has raised $3.5 million in Series A funding, including from Joen Bonnier of the Bonnier family, owner of the largest media group in Sweden. TechCrunch has more here.

    Drawbridge, a 5.5-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based ad tech company, has raised $25 million in Series C funding from Sequoia Capital, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and Northgate Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Omni, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based on-demand storage startup, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by Highland Capital Partners, with participation from Bolt, Formation 8 and individual investors, including Drake and Scooter Braun. The company had previously raised $3 million in seed funding. Fortune has more here.

    Pivotal, a three-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based software company that helps its customers build up their own software development capabilities, has raised $253 million in Series C funding at a $2.8 billion valuation from FordMicrosoft, EMC, VMware and GE. Recode has more here.

    Sirqul, a four-year-old, Seattle, Wa.-based company behind an IoT platform, has raised $3 million in additional Series A funding led by Miteno USA. The round, closed now with $9 million, also includes Compal Electronics and numerous angel investors. More here.

    Via, a four-year-old, New York-based on-demand rideshare app operating in New York City and Chicago, has raised $100 million in Series C funding led byPitango Growth, with participation from numerous other VCs and family offices including Poalim Capital Markets and C4 Ventures. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    VTS, a five-old, New York-based commercial real estate management and leasing platform, has raised $55 million in Series C funding led by Insight Venture Partners, with participation from earlier investors OpenView and Trinity Ventures. The company has now raised $84 million to date. The Real Deal has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    venBio Partners, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based life sciences investment firm, closed its second venture capital fund, with approximately $315 million. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Airtime, Sean Parker’s live mobile video chat platform, has acquired vLine, a  video chat infrastructure startup. No financial terms were disclosed. According to CrunchBase, vLine had raised $1.5 million from Harrison Metal and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. TechCrunch has more here.

    Blackjet, a four-year-old, Florida-based on-demand jet service created by Uber co-founder and chairman Garrett Camp, has informed members that it is “abruptly” ceasing operations. Fortune has more here.

    eBay is acquiring Expertmaker, a 10-year-old, Malmo, Sweden-based company that specializes in analysis of big data with a machine-learning twist. Terms aren’t being disclosed. Expertmaker appears to have been bootstrapped. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Brad Bernstein to managing partner at FTV Capital, which he joined in 2003 from Oak Hill Capital Management.

    Famed broadcaster Katie Couric is reportedly eyeing an exit from Yahoo amid its sale to a yet-to-be-named buyer.

    Venky Ganesan, a managing director at Menlo Ventures, was just named chairman of the National Venture Capital Association. Ganesan says that highlighting VC communities outside of centers in New York, Boston and the Bay Area will be his first priority. The WSJ has more here.

    Villi Iltchev, the former head of strategy and corporate development at Box and, before that, VP of corporate development and strategy at Salesforce, has joined August Capital as its newest partner. More here.

    Mary Lou Jepsen, a key figure in Facebook’s virtual reality ambitions, is leaving the company after a little more than a year on the job. She says she’s turning her attention instead to curing diseases using MRI images in the form of a consumer wearable.

    Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk says he’s so busy that he has a “sleeping bag in a conference room next to the production line that I use quite frequently.”

    Mark Paris, the former co-head of debt capital markets atCitbank, has joined Urban.Us, a Miami-based seed-stage venture firm, as a venture partner. Paris is based in New York. (Strange sounding but true.) More here.

    Michelle Peluso, the Gilt Groupe CEO who was hired to try and turnaround the discount shopping site, is joining Technology Crossover Ventures as a venture partner in New York City. Recode has more here.

    —–

    Data

    Courtesy of CB Insights: 95 tech startups that are reshaping residential real estate.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    The dehumanization of Facebook Messenger.

    How Tesla is shaking up the metals market.

    —–

    Detours

    Harvard is taking action against its single-gender final clubs.

    Donald Trump, Nate Silver, and the value of data journalism.

    The building of SFMOMA (a time-lapse video).

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Avanti, avanti!


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