Who's big and a steady money-loser? Twitter? Uber? Who else?
Investors may demand liquidation before money-losing companies with cash run through all their capital. Stockholders have the power to force that, unless there's some two-tier stock deal such as Google and Facebook have, but Twitter does not.
What's the next big thing?
- Self-driving cars that actually work are about three years from commercial deployment. What businesses will be created around that? Automated parking garages? Car-sharing? LIDAR manufacturing?
- In a few months, the Chevy Bolt will be shipping. More charging stations will be needed. Over the next decade, a need for a huge number of charging points will appear. Somebody has to build those.
- Surveillance cameras, including car dashcams, coupled to face recognition and AI. Big Brother where something is always watching. But who? Google? Samsung? ADT? G4S? NSA?
- The blue-sky possibility: Lockheed-Martin's Skunk Works succeeds in building a usable fusion reactor. They're not saying much other than that they've made enough progress to justify investing more of their own funds. The Skunk Works has a good track record of doing things others thought impossible. (The U-2, the SR-71, the F-117, the F-22, and probably some things that haven't been made public yet.) If that works, the world changes in a big way.
Probably not the next big thing:
- Virtual reality. There's still no killer app, and we're into the holiday shopping season. The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
- 3D printing. There are lots of good 3D printers, and they're bought by the same people who buy milling machines. They're a useful industrial tool. But home printing? Not happening.
- Internet of Things. It's mostly gimmicks so far. IP-addressable lightbulbs just aren't that useful. There's going to be a lot of crap manufactured, but it may just be a fad like hoverboards and CB radio.
- Hydrogen-powered cars. This is Toyota's answer to electric cars, and they're on sale now in California. They've sold about 700 of them in the US so far.
> - Virtual reality. There's still no killer app, and we're into the holiday shopping season. The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
I really don't get the negative vibe on HN. VR headsets are in the market for six months now. One of them is still incomplete. Both are price-targeted at the very top of the market. Sony's, the first consumer headset, hasn't seen its first holiday season. VR games are still in the exploratory phase. Yet, with all of these signs of current and active hardware, software and market development, there's enough hubris to call the death of the technology.
It's like saying that the electric car concept is crap because the Tesla Roadster has crappy range, no boot and sold only a thousand units.
There's a huge amount of IoT happening in the industrial sector. For example, I just listened to a presentation about how container delivery and loading is being optimized in Hamburg using various sensors and command/control systems. It's just the consumer stuff that's mostly solutions in search of a problem.
I almost wish we had a different name for consumer and industrial IoT. Most of the consumer stuff is silly and ends of derailing so many IoT conversations.
> The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
I disagree with this:
1) the only VR helmet which is confortable to wear is the PS headset which is tied to an underpowered console..
2) The resolution of the screens is still not good enough and it won't be good enough until you can read confortably text using VR glasses which will allow new use case..
3) a good VR helmet should have a camera to allow you to interact with the real world without taking off the helmet and currently only the Vive has this camera.
Once all these 3 points are solved and the price of the PC to drive the VR glasses is not too expensive then you could say that the hardware problem has been solved.
And until this point is reached, we won't know whether the VR will be a success or a fad, currently it's only really interesting for 'enthousiast' so success or lack of success of current hardware isn't really an indicator of the future of VR (a bit like smartphones: there were many bad web browsing phone before the iPhone arrived).
As for 3D printing, IoT and hydrogen powered cars: I agree.
I also often tend to forget that, but unlike the Smart home, where I agree with your opinion, IoT for industrial applications like remote monitoring and failure prediction of mechanical parts seems to develop pretty well.
> - Internet of Things. It's mostly gimmicks so far. IP-addressable lightbulbs just aren't that useful. There's going to be a lot of crap manufactured, but it may just be a fad like hoverboards and CB radio.
(Consumer IoT rant follows)
Current consumer "Smart Home" products always remind me of the old joke about the guy who lost his keys in a dark corner and then goes to look for them under the streetlight across the street - "because the light is better there".
I think there actually are a lot of household chores where automation would really shine - such as cleaning up, doing laundry, doing the dishes, many aspects of cooking, etc.
Of course those tasks are far too complex to be automated to any satisfactory degree as of today - but oddly, there doesn't seem to be much interest in research either. Instead, the industry seems to be running after seemingly low-hanging fruit that on closer look are not even fruit at all: Their products seem driven by what is easily doable with today's technology and what data the vendor would like to collect. Whether the use-case that the product satisfies actually exists seems to be unimportant. Then people are surprised if such products don't sell.
My favourite example is the wifi-enabled water boiler: I could imagine a lot of tasks that involve boiling water and that I'd love to automate: If you live alone and could walke up to an already prepared cup of tea/coffee/porridge would be nice. Yet the makes of that product chose to automate the one aspect of those tasks where automation brings the least benefit: Flicking the switch on the water boiler.
I believe when we're capable of building a "laundry bucket/washer/dryer/wardrobe" combo where you put your dirty laundry in the bucket and it magically ends up in your wardrobe the next day, smart homes will become useful. Not if we stick to light bulbs that need internet access.
> Virtual reality. There's still no killer app, and we're into the holiday shopping season. The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
The hardware problem is not yet solved until 8K (or even 4K) displays (and processing power for them) are widely available. The current generation uses too low-res displays for wide FOV.
> - Internet of Things. It's mostly gimmicks so far. IP-addressable lightbulbs just aren't that useful. There's going to be a lot of crap manufactured, but it may just be a fad like hoverboards and CB radio.
The killer applications of IoT do not lie in home appliances, but in industrial context.
- Virtual reality: what time-frame are you talking about? The hardware problem has not been solved. Yes, it's better than in the 90's, no it's not good enough. VR can be big, it will also take a while.
- 3D printing: The disruption 3D printing promises is reducing the "industry" size (both physical and in capital terms) and exploding the variety of real-world products available. This is huge, and is happening, if a bit slowly. The 3D printer market itself is a small detail.
- IoT: I'm mostly vocal for not plugging your "things" on the internet... but "It's mostly gimmicks so far" is what people said about every big market change just before it exploded. I really don't know how you could be wrong (and 5 minutes ago would say you weren't), but that answer does not bring me any confidence.
- Hydrogen-powered cars: Yep, those are really stupid. Won't go anywhere.
"3D printing. There are lots of good 3D printers, and they're bought by the same people who buy milling machines. They're a useful industrial tool. But home printing? Not happening."
I don't know of many people using 3d printing as exclusively for self-use. Most are people making toys, games, or components for machines which they sell to other people. So, I don't see how 3d printing has been a failure of anything other than idiotic futurists that think it's the ST:TNG replicator (it's not). If anything, I think 3d printing has taken off like gangbusters with small manufacturers and small businesses. They reap the benefits of having a small plastics manufacturing machine that doesn't need vacuum mold dies swapped out or machined by specialized tools. Just because VCs can't turn it into an firm with a successful IPO doesn't mean it's a failure is all I'm saying.
> Hydrogen-powered cars. This is Toyota's answer to electric cars, and they're on sale now in California.
I believe that cars use hydrogen in fuel cells, which makes the hydrogen just a component of a different battery technology (the rest of the car still being electric).
>Self-driving cars that actually work are about three years from commercial deployment.
Anyone who builds a business based on fully autonomous vehicles being available in three years is in for a rude shock. 30 years is probably more like it.
Sorry to be blunt, but likening the Internet of Things to CB Radio and Hoverboards is extremely myopic. All of the above concepts you referred to are arguably within the IoT, IP-addressable lightbulbs is one minuscule point of value that can be derived from gathering and processing information on the Internet. You should think about it more like this: there's an infrastructure layer, a hardware layer and a software layer...those changing and advancing three points of technology will provide waves and waves of oncoming new business models and value for decades.
> Who's big and a steady money-loser? Twitter? Uber? Who else?
I think you forgot Lyft and Snapchat, and probably AirBnb, although I don't know about that last example. There are probably other companies that fulfill the bill, although I can't think of them right now.
Amazon, of course. But I guess they're an outlier amongst outliers.
Exactly the same people care about VR who have always cared about VR - VR enthusiasts. I think that VR apps will have to be extremely compelling for normal people to be interested. I also have an idea that the people most likely to want to escape LR (Lousy Reality) are least likely to be able to afford VR right now.
I don't think the VR hardware problem has been solved. Until there's very good inside-out tracking, I don't see this becoming a mass market technology.
> - Virtual reality. There's still no killer app, and we're into the holiday shopping season. The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
Amen brother. Current VR implementations are hot garbage. Not nearly enough pixels to be immersive, they make you sick and send you careening into walls.
I see a lot of potential for racing games and that sort of thing, but until we fix the more serious issues of mobility I just can't see this going many places.
Give me my office chair and my 4K display any day.
To me the real scandal here is that while funding of startups is down, Venture firm funding is up and cash in the bank is the highest since 2000 [1]. So that means - like corporations currently - these funds are just sitting on cash [2].
I'm curious why LP's aren't up in arms (maybe they are privately), but my guess is that the answer venture funds give their LP's are that they are being prudent so that they are protected from the impending "crash" and can start investing when prices are lower.
What seems to be happening as a result is that venture funds are starting to invest more like Banks - looking for more traditional metrics like ARR that can protect them on the downside with the caveat that they still expect power law distribution of returns.
So basically they want to invest in potentially billion dollar companies that are cash flow positive from the start. IMO this is trying to have it all, and discourages moonshot bets that are capital intensive before finding their market.
It's a judgment call whether this is "good" or not, but it seems to me to counter the original goal of venture.
Sounds like the venture funds are actually doing their jobs then, namely trying to get the best possible return and not just blindly throwing money at everyone who walks through the door.
As an industry matures, returns to capital should naturally fall. This is a normal process, as the 'obvious' opportunities are systematically exploited, and the industry itself creates large incumbents that compete with startups.
The fact that venture funds are smoothly pivoting is a good thing, regardless of whether that's what LPs thought they were signing up for. If LPs are really upset at cash sitting around, they can (eventually) ask for their money back and find a different fund; that can't happen if the fund makes bad investments and loses the principal.
The worst possible outcome would be if funds forced themselves to keep doing business as usual until everything blew up.
It used to be that shoveling cash into a furnace to inflate the balloon was guaranteed to work. Someone always was buying whatever was inflating above the fire. SV selling to SV.
Now the question is whether the a rig is flight-worthy and has a reasonable chance to pay back even if not acquired. If IPOs are valuated along more traditional models sustainable revenue streams will become central. Some VC may eventually decide to chase a B$ unicorn and loose. Some VC may stop. Some VC may adjust. Paradigm shifts often leave people behind.
Risk management is becoming more important. That means smaller investments and a closer look/relationship. Traditional angel approach and possibly the industrialized version of YC and the like are becoming more important.
And yes, there is a systemic problem. Pumping money into the economy through financial means has proven not to be effective for medium to long term situations. If this is adjusted maybe bigger investments will flow again into SV. However the business models will be different. In the past the money was poured over SV and a significant part was used to build for SV customers. Customers will be to a larger extent elsewhere. The good news is that is more scalable and sustainable.
> Uber, valued at about $69 billion, is the most valuable American car company by some margin, worth more than General Motors and Fiat Chrysler combined.
Can someone explain this to me? What competitive edge does Uber have that would stop literally any well-funded company from entering their market as a competitor? I know they have pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network but does that really justify a $69B valuation? What's to stop consumers and drivers from jumping ship en masse?
> I know they have pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network
Look what happened to Uber in China where a local competitor had pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network before Uber got established there.
Uber bled cash, and bled some more cash, and bled some more cash while trying to build market share, and then finally gave up and sold their business to their competitor.
That's basically what's stopping a well-funded company from entering the market as a competitor, an aversion to bleeding cash to build market share which they might not ever be able to do.
The valuation is based on momentum and direction, with funny numbers applied to the assets and market share to reach such conclusions. The services they've offered as a startup can only be construed as a sample of whatever the massive organization they're building promises: some kind of broader marketplace that they are going to capture via the cab service.
This is, of course, massively risky and commits tremendous resources in a very short time. There is no good way of evaluating how this will go, because(as is typical in this generation of tech companies) the KPIs might be the wrong ones for a sustainable business and this gets figured out too late to change course. But that's what the investors were sold on, and that's what they're going to build until the day the cash runs out.
Copying Uber at a small scale with a limited feature set is feasible, just like making a little boutique search engine to compete with Google is feasible. But where do you go from there? Seriously competing means you need to do better than them, and with Uber already have advantages of scale and brand, what's your angle?
I used to think there was going to be a crash, but not anymore. We have just experienced a controlled deflation, probably the first time at least in my lifetime. Most/many tech companies got deflated but somehow we avoided a massive crash this time and sensibilities have increased without mass chaos.
Word of Caution: The Dot-Com & Real Estate bubbles happened slowly and then all at once. When a bubble slows down, everyone says we're just going through a correction. The possibility of a complete crash is still there in the next year or so. Especially, since a mega-hit ($10b+ val) hasn't been created in SV in over 5 years. Investors need these mega-hits in order to justify the risks they take and there hasn't been a break-out started since 2010.
It was actually expectable. I read Innovation and Entrepreneurship by Peter Drucker back when we were living the first bubble, and it is amazing how much the dot-com bubble followed previous technology disruption bubbles.
The book seriously predates the dot-com bubble. It does not mention it. It's just that it perfectly fitted the events back then, and still does; something that is a hallmark of quality.
According to Drucker, a first boom and crash is followed by a more shallow boom and slowdown, and then the tech is absorbed into everyday life and causes no more large market fluctuations.
Let's put things into perspective. The VC market raised 28 billion dollars last year [1]. Apple's market cap alone often goes up and down by this much on any given month (or even day, occasionally). While this small segment of the financial system gets a lot of press (especially on HN), this is a tiny amount in terms of the overall capital markets. My guess is that if the same kind of bubble were present in the stock or fixed income markets--which are both many many times larger than the VC investment market--there would be much more hysteria.
It's true that tech in general may be facing challenges because smartphones are not new anymore, but I was especially annoyed at the On-Demand bubble from last year, which felt to me like a "fake startup" trend. Saying the total addressable market of food is in the trillions so you're gonna make a food delivery app and give away a dollar for 80 cents just felt to me like, is this really a 'tech' business? There are no margins.
To be fair, software has higher profit margins than hardware. Even higher when you make that software as a service. A lot of the margins is diminished due to the physical upkeep, which can be argued as "hardware".
I would agree that on-demand services, for the most part, aren't innovating: they're just facilitating consumer-merchant relationships.
Other than the company names, has anything really changed since the Richter Scales put out "Here Comes Another Bubble" in 2007? "Make yourself a million bucks, partly skill, mostly luck: now you can afford a down payment on a small house."
Uber's valuation in particular worries me. Uber's product is 90 pixels on your phone - that's it. Behind that is computer code and an admittedly powerful network effect among drivers and riders. But I have to wonder about that power of that network effect over time, especially with this race to develop self-driving cars and other similar things. Meanwhile, Uber's business practices are, shall we say, often times questionable. Customers increasingly dislike the product, whether it's surge pricing, or dirty cars, or lousy drivers.
I just get nervous by these companies whose products are a single app on your phone and some computer code. This is generally not a great setup for being worth a lot of money 20 years from now.
Investing unwisely doesn't mean it's all going to come crashing down. There are a lot of companies being much more responsible right now. There are more companies than ever not going deep into VC over-reaching evaluations, that are cash positive. I do think there will be some fallout. I think the same is trending in real estate again too in a lot of markets.
Economies are cyclical, and any time you see double digit growth in any market for over half a decade, there's usually a dip at the end... how big depends on how over-inflated that market is.
Look, as the probably only credible person here to speak on Stock Valuations. Tech is not, nor is any other specific Industry or Sector the issue here. The issue here is interests rate.
If we are really expecting a downturn what will happen to the self driving car cycle that is barely beginning now? These companies need much more funding than software startups.
[+] [-] Animats|9 years ago|reply
Investors may demand liquidation before money-losing companies with cash run through all their capital. Stockholders have the power to force that, unless there's some two-tier stock deal such as Google and Facebook have, but Twitter does not.
What's the next big thing?
- Self-driving cars that actually work are about three years from commercial deployment. What businesses will be created around that? Automated parking garages? Car-sharing? LIDAR manufacturing?
- In a few months, the Chevy Bolt will be shipping. More charging stations will be needed. Over the next decade, a need for a huge number of charging points will appear. Somebody has to build those.
- Surveillance cameras, including car dashcams, coupled to face recognition and AI. Big Brother where something is always watching. But who? Google? Samsung? ADT? G4S? NSA?
- The blue-sky possibility: Lockheed-Martin's Skunk Works succeeds in building a usable fusion reactor. They're not saying much other than that they've made enough progress to justify investing more of their own funds. The Skunk Works has a good track record of doing things others thought impossible. (The U-2, the SR-71, the F-117, the F-22, and probably some things that haven't been made public yet.) If that works, the world changes in a big way.
Probably not the next big thing:
- Virtual reality. There's still no killer app, and we're into the holiday shopping season. The hardware problem has been solved, and nobody cares. It's the new 3D TV.
- 3D printing. There are lots of good 3D printers, and they're bought by the same people who buy milling machines. They're a useful industrial tool. But home printing? Not happening.
- Internet of Things. It's mostly gimmicks so far. IP-addressable lightbulbs just aren't that useful. There's going to be a lot of crap manufactured, but it may just be a fad like hoverboards and CB radio.
- Hydrogen-powered cars. This is Toyota's answer to electric cars, and they're on sale now in California. They've sold about 700 of them in the US so far.
[+] [-] sergiosgc|9 years ago|reply
I really don't get the negative vibe on HN. VR headsets are in the market for six months now. One of them is still incomplete. Both are price-targeted at the very top of the market. Sony's, the first consumer headset, hasn't seen its first holiday season. VR games are still in the exploratory phase. Yet, with all of these signs of current and active hardware, software and market development, there's enough hubris to call the death of the technology.
It's like saying that the electric car concept is crap because the Tesla Roadster has crappy range, no boot and sold only a thousand units.
[+] [-] ghaff|9 years ago|reply
There's a huge amount of IoT happening in the industrial sector. For example, I just listened to a presentation about how container delivery and loading is being optimized in Hamburg using various sensors and command/control systems. It's just the consumer stuff that's mostly solutions in search of a problem.
I almost wish we had a different name for consumer and industrial IoT. Most of the consumer stuff is silly and ends of derailing so many IoT conversations.
[+] [-] renox|9 years ago|reply
I disagree with this: 1) the only VR helmet which is confortable to wear is the PS headset which is tied to an underpowered console..
2) The resolution of the screens is still not good enough and it won't be good enough until you can read confortably text using VR glasses which will allow new use case..
3) a good VR helmet should have a camera to allow you to interact with the real world without taking off the helmet and currently only the Vive has this camera.
Once all these 3 points are solved and the price of the PC to drive the VR glasses is not too expensive then you could say that the hardware problem has been solved. And until this point is reached, we won't know whether the VR will be a success or a fad, currently it's only really interesting for 'enthousiast' so success or lack of success of current hardware isn't really an indicator of the future of VR (a bit like smartphones: there were many bad web browsing phone before the iPhone arrived).
As for 3D printing, IoT and hydrogen powered cars: I agree.
[+] [-] hobofan|9 years ago|reply
I also often tend to forget that, but unlike the Smart home, where I agree with your opinion, IoT for industrial applications like remote monitoring and failure prediction of mechanical parts seems to develop pretty well.
[+] [-] xg15|9 years ago|reply
(Consumer IoT rant follows)
Current consumer "Smart Home" products always remind me of the old joke about the guy who lost his keys in a dark corner and then goes to look for them under the streetlight across the street - "because the light is better there".
I think there actually are a lot of household chores where automation would really shine - such as cleaning up, doing laundry, doing the dishes, many aspects of cooking, etc.
Of course those tasks are far too complex to be automated to any satisfactory degree as of today - but oddly, there doesn't seem to be much interest in research either. Instead, the industry seems to be running after seemingly low-hanging fruit that on closer look are not even fruit at all: Their products seem driven by what is easily doable with today's technology and what data the vendor would like to collect. Whether the use-case that the product satisfies actually exists seems to be unimportant. Then people are surprised if such products don't sell.
My favourite example is the wifi-enabled water boiler: I could imagine a lot of tasks that involve boiling water and that I'd love to automate: If you live alone and could walke up to an already prepared cup of tea/coffee/porridge would be nice. Yet the makes of that product chose to automate the one aspect of those tasks where automation brings the least benefit: Flicking the switch on the water boiler.
I believe when we're capable of building a "laundry bucket/washer/dryer/wardrobe" combo where you put your dirty laundry in the bucket and it magically ends up in your wardrobe the next day, smart homes will become useful. Not if we stick to light bulbs that need internet access.
[+] [-] Yaggo|9 years ago|reply
The hardware problem is not yet solved until 8K (or even 4K) displays (and processing power for them) are widely available. The current generation uses too low-res displays for wide FOV.
[+] [-] wolfgke|9 years ago|reply
> [...]
> - Internet of Things. It's mostly gimmicks so far. IP-addressable lightbulbs just aren't that useful. There's going to be a lot of crap manufactured, but it may just be a fad like hoverboards and CB radio.
The killer applications of IoT do not lie in home appliances, but in industrial context.
[+] [-] marcosdumay|9 years ago|reply
- Virtual reality: what time-frame are you talking about? The hardware problem has not been solved. Yes, it's better than in the 90's, no it's not good enough. VR can be big, it will also take a while.
- 3D printing: The disruption 3D printing promises is reducing the "industry" size (both physical and in capital terms) and exploding the variety of real-world products available. This is huge, and is happening, if a bit slowly. The 3D printer market itself is a small detail.
- IoT: I'm mostly vocal for not plugging your "things" on the internet... but "It's mostly gimmicks so far" is what people said about every big market change just before it exploded. I really don't know how you could be wrong (and 5 minutes ago would say you weren't), but that answer does not bring me any confidence.
- Hydrogen-powered cars: Yep, those are really stupid. Won't go anywhere.
[+] [-] norea-armozel|9 years ago|reply
I don't know of many people using 3d printing as exclusively for self-use. Most are people making toys, games, or components for machines which they sell to other people. So, I don't see how 3d printing has been a failure of anything other than idiotic futurists that think it's the ST:TNG replicator (it's not). If anything, I think 3d printing has taken off like gangbusters with small manufacturers and small businesses. They reap the benefits of having a small plastics manufacturing machine that doesn't need vacuum mold dies swapped out or machined by specialized tools. Just because VCs can't turn it into an firm with a successful IPO doesn't mean it's a failure is all I'm saying.
[+] [-] unknown|9 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] amelius|9 years ago|reply
I believe that cars use hydrogen in fuel cells, which makes the hydrogen just a component of a different battery technology (the rest of the car still being electric).
[+] [-] ghaff|9 years ago|reply
Anyone who builds a business based on fully autonomous vehicles being available in three years is in for a rude shock. 30 years is probably more like it.
[+] [-] x2398dh1|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jimmywanger|9 years ago|reply
I think you forgot Lyft and Snapchat, and probably AirBnb, although I don't know about that last example. There are probably other companies that fulfill the bill, although I can't think of them right now.
Amazon, of course. But I guess they're an outlier amongst outliers.
[+] [-] psyc|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gman83|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] amelius|9 years ago|reply
How about being able to remotely be present at e.g. music or sports events? And have the best possible seat?
[+] [-] wentoodeep|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Cieplak|9 years ago|reply
http://unifiedgravity.com/
[+] [-] FussyZeus|9 years ago|reply
Amen brother. Current VR implementations are hot garbage. Not nearly enough pixels to be immersive, they make you sick and send you careening into walls.
I see a lot of potential for racing games and that sort of thing, but until we fix the more serious issues of mobility I just can't see this going many places.
Give me my office chair and my 4K display any day.
[+] [-] AndrewKemendo|9 years ago|reply
I'm curious why LP's aren't up in arms (maybe they are privately), but my guess is that the answer venture funds give their LP's are that they are being prudent so that they are protected from the impending "crash" and can start investing when prices are lower.
What seems to be happening as a result is that venture funds are starting to invest more like Banks - looking for more traditional metrics like ARR that can protect them on the downside with the caveat that they still expect power law distribution of returns.
So basically they want to invest in potentially billion dollar companies that are cash flow positive from the start. IMO this is trying to have it all, and discourages moonshot bets that are capital intensive before finding their market.
It's a judgment call whether this is "good" or not, but it seems to me to counter the original goal of venture.
[1] http://www.wsj.com/articles/funds-flow-to-venture-firms-1459...
[2] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-09/more-vent...
[+] [-] smallnamespace|9 years ago|reply
As an industry matures, returns to capital should naturally fall. This is a normal process, as the 'obvious' opportunities are systematically exploited, and the industry itself creates large incumbents that compete with startups.
The fact that venture funds are smoothly pivoting is a good thing, regardless of whether that's what LPs thought they were signing up for. If LPs are really upset at cash sitting around, they can (eventually) ask for their money back and find a different fund; that can't happen if the fund makes bad investments and loses the principal.
The worst possible outcome would be if funds forced themselves to keep doing business as usual until everything blew up.
[+] [-] heisenbit|9 years ago|reply
It used to be that shoveling cash into a furnace to inflate the balloon was guaranteed to work. Someone always was buying whatever was inflating above the fire. SV selling to SV.
Now the question is whether the a rig is flight-worthy and has a reasonable chance to pay back even if not acquired. If IPOs are valuated along more traditional models sustainable revenue streams will become central. Some VC may eventually decide to chase a B$ unicorn and loose. Some VC may stop. Some VC may adjust. Paradigm shifts often leave people behind.
Risk management is becoming more important. That means smaller investments and a closer look/relationship. Traditional angel approach and possibly the industrialized version of YC and the like are becoming more important.
And yes, there is a systemic problem. Pumping money into the economy through financial means has proven not to be effective for medium to long term situations. If this is adjusted maybe bigger investments will flow again into SV. However the business models will be different. In the past the money was poured over SV and a significant part was used to build for SV customers. Customers will be to a larger extent elsewhere. The good news is that is more scalable and sustainable.
[+] [-] pault|9 years ago|reply
Can someone explain this to me? What competitive edge does Uber have that would stop literally any well-funded company from entering their market as a competitor? I know they have pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network but does that really justify a $69B valuation? What's to stop consumers and drivers from jumping ship en masse?
[+] [-] imron|9 years ago|reply
> I know they have pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network
Look what happened to Uber in China where a local competitor had pervasive brand awareness and a large driver network before Uber got established there.
Uber bled cash, and bled some more cash, and bled some more cash while trying to build market share, and then finally gave up and sold their business to their competitor.
That's basically what's stopping a well-funded company from entering the market as a competitor, an aversion to bleeding cash to build market share which they might not ever be able to do.
[+] [-] buzzybee|9 years ago|reply
This is, of course, massively risky and commits tremendous resources in a very short time. There is no good way of evaluating how this will go, because(as is typical in this generation of tech companies) the KPIs might be the wrong ones for a sustainable business and this gets figured out too late to change course. But that's what the investors were sold on, and that's what they're going to build until the day the cash runs out.
[+] [-] TheSpiceIsLife|9 years ago|reply
The other two manufacture cars, Uber manufactures, well, nothing.
[+] [-] andyzweb|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kefka|9 years ago|reply
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12759649
Tl;Dr: Uberkiller focusing on Hitchhiking, proof of identity, and set-your-own-rates. Skims from % of paid transactions.
[+] [-] rb808|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] TulliusCicero|9 years ago|reply
Copying Uber at a small scale with a limited feature set is feasible, just like making a little boutique search engine to compete with Google is feasible. But where do you go from there? Seriously competing means you need to do better than them, and with Uber already have advantages of scale and brand, what's your angle?
[+] [-] pfarnsworth|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] damonpace|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sergiosgc|9 years ago|reply
The book seriously predates the dot-com bubble. It does not mention it. It's just that it perfectly fitted the events back then, and still does; something that is a hallmark of quality.
According to Drucker, a first boom and crash is followed by a more shallow boom and slowdown, and then the tech is absorbed into everyday life and causes no more large market fluctuations.
[+] [-] dtnewman|9 years ago|reply
[1] http://nvca.org/pressreleases/venture-capitalists-raise-5-bi...
[+] [-] firasd|9 years ago|reply
It's true that tech in general may be facing challenges because smartphones are not new anymore, but I was especially annoyed at the On-Demand bubble from last year, which felt to me like a "fake startup" trend. Saying the total addressable market of food is in the trillions so you're gonna make a food delivery app and give away a dollar for 80 cents just felt to me like, is this really a 'tech' business? There are no margins.
[+] [-] CN7R|9 years ago|reply
I would agree that on-demand services, for the most part, aren't innovating: they're just facilitating consumer-merchant relationships.
[+] [-] apsec112|9 years ago|reply
http://blog.samaltman.com/were-in-a-bubble
Other than the company names, has anything really changed since the Richter Scales put out "Here Comes Another Bubble" in 2007? "Make yourself a million bucks, partly skill, mostly luck: now you can afford a down payment on a small house."
[+] [-] allenleee|9 years ago|reply
Silicon Valley — The Wall Street Without Bubble
https://medium.com/startup-blink/silicon-valley-the-wall-str...
[+] [-] rapsey|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bedhead|9 years ago|reply
I just get nervous by these companies whose products are a single app on your phone and some computer code. This is generally not a great setup for being worth a lot of money 20 years from now.
[+] [-] tempodox|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tracker1|9 years ago|reply
Economies are cyclical, and any time you see double digit growth in any market for over half a decade, there's usually a dip at the end... how big depends on how over-inflated that market is.
[+] [-] ry4n413|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] yalogin|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mrcactu5|9 years ago|reply
Perhaps I could be talking to the wrong people.
[+] [-] DannyB2|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|9 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] jerianasmith|9 years ago|reply