Misplaced Pages

Burr, Egan, Deleage & Co.

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Burr, Egan, Deleage & Co." – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Burr, Egan, Deleage & Co.
Company typePrivate ownership
IndustryPrivate equity,
Founded1979
FounderCraig Burr, William P. Egan, and Dr. Jean Deleage, Ph.D.
Defunct1996
FateDissolved
SuccessorAlta Communications, Alta Partners, Alta Berkeley Capital, Polaris Venture Partners
HeadquartersBoston, Massachusetts, United States
ProductsVenture capital

Burr, Egan, Deleage & Co. (BEDCO) was a venture capital firm which focused on investments in information technology, communications, and healthcare/biotechnology companies.

BEDCO was one of the first venture capital firm to set up a bi-coastal operation with a presence in both Boston, Massachusetts and Silicon Valley in California.

The firm was founded in 1979 and dissolved in 1996, with Alta Partners and Alta Communications assuming management responsibility for certain existing investments. Other successor firms include Polaris Venture Partners and Alta Berkeley.

History

History of private equity
and venture capital
Early history
(origins of modern private equity)
The 1980s
(leveraged buyout boom)
The 1990s
(leveraged buyout and the venture capital bubble)
The 2000s
(dot-com bubble to the credit crunch)
The 2010s
(expansion)
The 2020s
(COVID-19 recession)

The firm was founded in 1979 by Craig Burr, William P. Egan, and Dr. Jean Deleage, Ph.D. Burr and Egan had worked together at the pioneering private equity firm TA Associates. Deleage had come from Sofinnova Partners, a venture capital firm in France that he had co-founded in 1971. In 1976, Deleage had founded Sofinnova’s US affiliate, based in San Francisco. At its zenith the company managed over $700 million in assets and today is the direct predecessor of four venture capital firms with aggregate capital in excess of $5.7 billion:

Among BEDCO’s most notable investments were Continental Cablevision with H. Irving Grousbeck, Qwest with Philip Anschutz, Cephalon, American Superconductor and SyQuest Technology.

Investment funds

From its founding in 1979 through its dissolution in 1996, BEDCO raised more than a dozen venture capital funds with total investor commitments of approximately $700 million.

  • 1980 - $12m - Alta Company
  • 1982 - $60m - Alta II (Late Stage)
  • 1982 - $10m - Alta Berkeley Venture Partners (Bal. Stage)
  • 1983 - $18m - Alta Berkeley LP Liquidating Trust (Early Stage)
  • 1984 - $15.7m - Alta Berkeley Eurofund (Early Stage)
  • 1986 - $45m - Alta Subordinated Debt (Mezzanine)
  • 1986 - $32.3m - Alta Berkeley L.P. II (Early Stage)
  • 1988 - $35m - Alta Communications IV (Late Stage)
  • 1988 - $124m - Alta IV (Late Stage)
  • 1988 - $68m - Alta Subordinated Debt II (Mezzanine)
  • 1992 - $161m - Alta V
  • 1993 - $96m - Alta Subordinated Debt III (Mezzanine)
  • 1993 - $27m - Alta Berkeley III (Early Stage)

Successor firms

Polaris Venture Partners

Polaris Venture Partners was the first of four successors to BEDCO. One of the contributing factors in the dissolution was the departure of three of BEDCO’s junior partners, Jon Flint, Terry McGuire, Steve Arnold (Venture Capitalist). The three founders, left BEDCO in 1995 and began raising their first independent venture capital fund. Today, Polaris Venture Partners is a venture capital firm specializing in seed and early stage investments particularly in companies engaged in the information technology and life sciences sectors. Polaris is based in Waltham, Massachusetts with an additional office in Seattle, Washington.

Since 1995, Polaris has raised five venture capital funds with over $2.6 billion of investor commitments. To date, all of the Polaris funds have been above average performers for their respective vintage years. Polaris Venture Partners V, which was closed in 2006, raised $1 billion of investor commitments.

Alta Partners

Alta Partners was founded by BEDCO co-founder Dr. Jean Deleage, Ph.D., along with Garrett Gruener, a former partner at BEDCO. Today, the firm, which is based in San Francisco, invests in biotechnology and life science companies and has made over 130 investments since its separation from BEDCO.

Since 1996, Alta has raised eight venture capital funds including four funds in its Alta California Funds series, three funds in its Alta Biopharma Partners series and most recently in 2006, Alta raised Alta Partners VIII with $500 million of investor commitments

Alta Communications

Alta Communications was founded by BEDCO co-founders Craig Burr and William P. Egan. Today the firm, which is based in Waltham, Massachusetts (just outside Boston), invests primarily in later-stage opportunities in the traditional media and telecommunications sectors.

Since 1996, Alta Communications has raised four venture capital funds with over $1.4 billion of investor commitments.

Alta Berkeley

Alta Berkeley was formed from BEDCO’s European operations. In 1982, Bryan Wood, who had been working in corporate finance in Britain, partnered with BEDCO to establish a presence in Europe. Today, Alta Berkeley makes early stage investments in technology companies based in Europe and Israel. Alta Berkeley's sixth and most recent fund raised approximately $145 million of investor commitments.

References

  1. Egan, William P. oral history. Computer History Museum. 4 November 2010.

External links

Private equity and venture capital investment firms
Investment strategy
History
Investors
Categories: