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In the past five years, four other alums have either shuttered or stopped trading hedge fund strategies. It's the latest spinoff from long-running Tiger Cub Lone Pine Capital to shutter. Lone Pine, the $16 billion firm led by co-chief investment officers Kelly Granat and David Craver, was founded in 1997 by billionaire Steve Mandel. Inside the Lone Pine family treeGaonkar's experience is far from the norm for Lone Pine alums though. Firms like Lone Pine, Tiger Global, Coatue, Viking Global, Maverick, Light Street, and others have lasted for decades and minted billionaires along the way.
Persons: Scott Coulter's, Mala Gaonkar, , Coulter, Cowbird, Pine, Kelly Granat, David Craver, Steve Mandel, Mandel, Julian Robertson's, Lone, Coatue, redemptions, Gaonkar, David Byrne, SurgoCap, Abobe, David Stemerman's, Scott Phillips, Matt Iorio's, Li Ran's, Brian Eizenstat's, Paul Eisenstein's, Nikhil Trikha, Arthur Wit, that's, Andreas Halvorsen's, Dan Sundheim's, Ben Jacobs, Ning Jin, Marco Tablada, Robertson, Tom Purcell Organizations: Service, Business, Lone Pine, Julian Robertson's Tiger Management, Cubs, Roberston's Tiger Management, Tiger, CNBC, Nvidia, GE, Figma, Pine, Latimer, Elm, Sky Capital, CenterBook Partners, Ampersand Capital Group, Global, Fund Research, Tiger Cub, Tiger Management, Viking Global, Viking Locations: Lone, Lone Pine, Granat, Texas, Li Ran's London, California, Viking
Amazon abandoned its $1.7 billion purchase of iRobot in January after the FTC and European regulators raised concerns. Since peaking at $1.5 trillion in 2021, tech transaction volume has plummeted, dropping to $544 billion last year, according to Dealogic. Before the company announced its $27 billion purchase of data analytics software company Splunk last September, he said he viewed the risk as absolutely worth taking. Alphabet's last big deal was its $5.4 billion purchase of cybersecurity company Mandiant in 2022. Microsoft closed its massive $75 billion purchase of Activision in October, but it took 20 months and a protracted fight with U.S. and European regulators.
Persons: Lina Khan, Jonathan Kanter, Khan, Joe Biden, Drew Angerer, Biden, Permira, Thoma, Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump's, Barry Diller, Reid Hoffman, Kamala Harris, Andrew Luh, Gunderson Dettmer, Figma, Dana Rao, Rao, We've, they've, Juniper, Salesforce, Antonio Neri, Pau Barrena, Neri, Sergio Letelier, hasn't, Letelier, Marc Benioff, It's Benioff's, Slack, Benioff, Derek Idemoto, who's, Idemoto, that's, Splunk, HPE's Letelier, it's, Harris, Trump Organizations: U.S . Federal Trade Commission, Justice, Brookings Institution, U.S, Senate, Getty, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Federal Trade Commission, iRobot, FTC, BlackRock, Thoma Bravo, KKR, Republican, CNBC, Democratic, Trump, Big Tech, Justice Department, DOJ, Apple, Meta, Adobe, European Commission, UK Competition, Markets Authority, Justice Department's Antitrust, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Mobile World Congress, MWC, AFP, Juniper, Markets, DOJ's Antitrust, European Union, EU, Software, Cisco, Activision, Foreign Investment, Regulators, Bloomberg, Tech Locations: Washington, Europe, Barcelona, Pau, Salesforce, United States
"We essentially see ourselves as a Google Maps for communities," PamPam cofounder Helena Jaramillo told Business Insider. The platform draws its data from Mapbox and Google Places. "We used all these apps obviously to do that, Google Maps or getting lists or recommendations from friends, but it just never really felt right." The team behind Zenly, which Snapchat acquired and morphed into its Snap Map feature, is building another new social map app called "Bump." AdvertisementPamPam sees its creators as "community creators," Jaramillo explained.
Persons: , PamPam, Helena Jaramillo, Jaramillo, Carlo Jörges, Jörges, We've, What's, Snapchat, Raya, monetization Organizations: Service, Google, Business, Big Tech, Facebook, YouTube Locations: New York City, Philadelphia, Mapbox, doesn't
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. I recently left a role in Big Tech as a senior program manager at Figma, and I've previously worked at Meta, Pinterest, Intuit, and LinkedIn. In 2016, I pivoted to an account manager roleI more than doubled my salary at a tech startup in San Francisco. Next, I was interested in pivoting to a full-time program manager role, so I applied cold, interviewed, and landed an offer at LinkedIn. Here are the four strategies that were the most helpful to me in increasing my salary in Big Tech.
Persons: , Jean Kang, San Francisco who's, It's, I've, I'm, Lauryn Haas Organizations: Service, Meta, Intuit, LinkedIn, Big Tech, Business, Facebook, Microsoft, Big Locations: San Francisco, Big, Pinterest, Figma, Big Tech, Salesforce, lhaas@businessinsider.com
The execs leading ArtBotAI said it differs from other ad agency holding groups' AI offerings because it builds on the ArtBot content automation tool its Critical Mass agency originally launched in 2022. "It's not just a generative AI tool, it's an automation tool that has been operationalized with large accounts at scale." Related storiesArtBotAI's generative AI functionality is driven by Omnicom's large language models, which it has created through partnerships with companies including Microsoft, OpenAI, Google, Getty, Adobe, and Amazon. KAITLIN MOERMANOmnicom said clients using ArtBotAI have, on average, achieved 40% increases in ad engagements like clicks and video views since they began using the platform. Omnicom stated in its February financial filings that its use of generative AI presents risks like ethical considerations, a negative impact on the public perception of the company, and the need to comply with various regulations.
Persons: , ArtBotAI, ArtBot, Paolo Yuvienco, It's, Artbot, Yuvienco, Valerie Vargas, Alissa Hansen, KAITLIN MOERMAN Omnicom, Omnicom, Hansen, Ingo Duckerschein, Duckerschein Organizations: Service, Business, Apple, Unilever, Pfizer, Volkswagen, Omni, Omni Assist, Microsoft, Google, Getty, Adobe, Advertising, United Talent Agency, Agency, WPP, Intuit, Taboola Locations: North America
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewBuzz around the creator economy has been waning — but the end of a hype cycle isn't always bad news. AdvertisementHis continued interest in the creator economy stems in part from his approach to defining the broad space. Related storiesFrom gaming to social networks to commerce to enterprise, the creator economy engulfs many areas of interest. Where Daybreak Ventures sees potentialWhere the creator economy overlaps with commerce is especially interesting to Woodbury right now.
Persons: , Rex Woodbury, that's, Woodbury, haven't Organizations: Service, Daybreak Ventures, Business, Ventures, Creative, Flagship, Industrial Locations: Woodbury
As design firm Figma rolls out its first major AI upgrade for its platform, CEO and co-founder Dylan Field is taking no chances with customers amid steep AI adoption and demand curves and consumer hype. Figma is paying the cost of the AI upgrade for now instead of attempting to charge customers. "We're gonna eat the cost for 2024, because we don't know how people are going to use the features yet. Figma's UI3 redesign, released in limited beta on June 26 with a waitlist for additional users, includes a new toolbox called "Figma AI." 6 on this year's CNBC Disruptor 50 list, while Figma ranked No.
Persons: Dylan Field, CNBC's Deirdre Bosa, Canva, Figma, we're Organizations: Figma, Adobe, CNBC, Google
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFigma CEO on failed Adobe deal, startup landscape, big redesign with AIFigma CEO Dylan Field joins 'The Exchange' with CNBC's Deirdre Bosa to discuss Figma's announcements of new AI features, the abandonment of the company's merger with Adobe, and more.
Persons: Dylan Field, CNBC's Deirdre Bosa Organizations: Adobe
Analysts have slashed price targets on three stocks from around the world over the past week: Adobe , France's Remy Cointreau , and Israeli software provider NICE . Adobe Five analysts cut their price targets ahead of Adobe's second-quarter earnings report, released after the bell Thursday. Remy Cointreau It's also been a tough week for Remy Cointreau, the makers of cognacs, liqueurs, and champagne. Ten analysts cut their price target on the stock over the past week. NICE NICE, which builds customer relationship management software, saw five analyst price target cuts over the past week.
Persons: France's Remy Cointreau, Remy Cointreau, Oppenheimer, Brian Schwartz, Remy Cointreau It's, Sanjeet Aujla, Remy, Rishi Jaluria Organizations: NICE, CNBC Pro, Adobe, Google, UBS, Nasdaq, RBC Locations: U.S, Adobe's, Cognac, China, Europe, United States
Ali Ghodsi, co-founder and CEO of Databricks, speaks at a press conference at Databricks' Data and AI Summit in San Francisco on June 12, 2024. Databricks, the data analytics software vendor that's among the most richly valued private U.S. tech companies, told investors on Wednesday that annualized revenue will reach $2.4 billion by the midpoint of this year. In April, security software company Rubrik debuted on the New York Stock Exchange. In March, the company told media outlets outlets that it generated $1.6 billion in revenue for the year ending Jan. 31, up more than 50% year over year. Last week Databricks said it was paying over $1 billion to buy Tabular, a startup whose founders created Iceberg.
Persons: Ali Ghodsi, Dave Conte, I've, Conte, Rubrik, Conte didn't, Databricks, Ghodsi, Snowflake Organizations: Databricks, Summit, New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, CNBC Locations: San Francisco
Jim Cramer's week ahead: Fed meeting and CPI report
  + stars: | 2024-06-07 | by ( Julie Coleman | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday guided investors through next week's most market-moving events, highlighting the Federal Reserve's meeting and the latest consumer price index report. Nvidia will implement its 10-for-1 stock split, and Cramer said shares might drop on Monday as buyers take profits. Oracle reports on Tuesday, and Cramer said he's not sure how this enterprise software company will fare. Casey's General Stores will also report that day, and Cramer said business is strong and the stock has been "a total winner." In that vein, the Fed will likely leave rates higher for longer at its Wednesday meeting, Cramer said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Jay Powell, Eli Lilly, Cramer, Eli Lilly's, he's, hasn't, nonfarm, He'll Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Apple's, Conference, Vision Pro, FDA, Oracle, Casey's, Broadcom, Signet, Adobe Locations: Figma
I always wanted to work in Big Tech, and when I graduated from college, I made it happen. Working in Big Tech has lots of perksI loved learning how each of these big companies operated. Related storiesI realized I was just making big companies more money. The people around me would only talk about other tech companies and tech advancements and only hang out with other tech workers. Since leaving Big Tech, I feel like a new personI'm so much happier now.
Persons: , Jean Kang, who's, It's, Pinterest, overdeliver, I'm, I'd, hustles, I've, would've Organizations: Service, Meta, Intuit, LinkedIn, Big Tech, Business, Big Locations: San Francisco, Big, Big Tech, Japan, Korea
I always wanted to work in Big Tech, and when I graduated from college, I made it happen. Working in Big Tech has lots of perksI loved learning how each of these big companies operated. Related storiesI realized I was just making big companies more money. The people around me would only talk about other tech companies and tech advancements and only hang out with other tech workers. Since leaving Big Tech, I feel like a new personI'm so much happier now.
Persons: , Jean Kang, who's, It's, Pinterest, overdeliver, I'm, I'd, hustles, I've, would've Organizations: Service, Meta, Intuit, LinkedIn, Big Tech, Business, Big Locations: San Francisco, Big, Big Tech, Japan, Korea
HarbourVest Global Private Equity , a diversified listed private equity investment company, could see its share price rise by more than 40%, according to analysts at investment banks Peel Hunt and Jefferies. Richard Hickman, the managing director of HVPE, describes it as the "most diversified, listed private equity investment company in London." "We're a global fully diversified portfolio covering buyout funds, the more established businesses from small cap through medium to large cap." NAV represents the value of an investment fund's assets per share. They estimate that share buybacks at the current discount could result in a 1.4% uplift in net asset value per share.
Persons: Peel Hunt, Jefferies, Richard Hickman, HVPE, Hickman, Alan Brierley, Ben Newell, Warren, Buffett Organizations: HarbourVest Global, Equity, Peel, London Stock Exchange, CNBC, NAV, Jefferies, Investec Locations: London
CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Dow breaks through 40,000 barrierThe Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly passed the 40,000 mark for the first time before ending lower. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq also hit record highs but ended the session in negative territory. The Dow has climbed nearly 6% in 2024, while the Nasdaq and S&P 500 are up 11% each. [PRO] New S&P 500 targetsWall Street's recent record highs have prompted market analysts to revise their S&P 500 year-end price targets.
Persons: Dow, John David Rainey, We've, Armour, Armour's, Kleiner Perkins, Bob Pisani Organizations: CNBC, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Walmart, GameStop, AMC Locations: North America, Sequoia
Dylan Field, co-founder and CEO of Figma, speaks at the startup's Config conference in San Francisco on May 10, 2022. Figma, a cloud-based design tool company, said Thursday it will allow investors, including current and former employees, to sell their shares in a tender offer that values the company at $12.5 billion. That's up 25% from the valuation at which the company fundraised in 2021, but below the $20 billion acquisition offer Adobe made in 2022. Adobe and Figma called off the planned acquisition in December following regulatory scrutiny. In December, a regulatory filing said Adobe would pay Figma a $1 billion breakup fee.
Persons: Dylan Field, Kleiner Perkins, Salesforce, Figma, Morgan, CNBC's Jordan Novet Organizations: Figma, Adobe, Microsoft, Google, Oracle Locations: San Francisco, Sequoia
In January, the legal startup DoNotPay sent more than $1 million to employees and investors in its first-ever dividend. He got the idea from one of his own angels, Sahil Lavingia, whose startup Gumroad issued a dividend last year. The expectation is that when a company sells or goes public, employees will cash in their shares for untold riches. Last year, the digital commerce startup Gumroad paid a dividend of $1 million across employees, investors, and thousands of crowdfunding backers. Cash rewardsBrowder said he wanted to offer a dividend to reward those employees and investors who bet on the startup early.
Persons: Joshua Browder, Browder, DoNotPay, it's, Sahil Lavingia, Josh Seidenfeld, Cooley, Steve Huffman, Spencer Platt, Seidenfeld, Lavingia, Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock, Dylan Field, Scott Belsky, Daniel Dines, Balaji Srinivasan, Cash, there's Organizations: Business, Big Law, Employees, Founders Fund, Adobe Locations: San Francisco
Adobe shares slip 10% on soft sales forecast
  + stars: | 2024-03-14 | by ( Jordan Novet | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen speaks during an interview with CNBC on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Feb. 20, 2024. During the quarter, Adobe abandoned its $20 billion acquisition of design software startup Figma after U.K. regulators found competitive concerns. Adobe will work with OpenAI around Sora, David Wadhwani, president of Adobe's digital media business, said on the earnings call. Adobe sees fiscal second-quarter earnings of $4.35 to $4.40 per share on an adjusted basis, with $5.25 billion to $5.30 billion in revenue. Leaving out the after-hours movement, Adobe shares have fallen 4% so far this year, while the S&P 500 index has gained 8% over the same time period.
Persons: Shantanu Narayen, OpenAI, Sora, David Wadhwani, LSEG, Wadhwani Organizations: CNBC, New York Stock Exchange, Adobe, LSEG, Firefly Services Locations: Sora
Apple | Spotify | Amazon | YouTube Listen and follow ‘Hard Fork’Bluesky, the Twitter spinoff, is now open for public sign-ups. Can its dreams of decentralization fix social media? We talk with the company’s chief executive, Jay Graber. Then, the New York Times reporter Erin Griffith on how Adobe’s failure to acquire Figma has spooked tech companies and upset Silicon Valley’s start-up pipeline. And finally, updates on ancient scrolls and artificial intelligence, Google’s chatbots, and the fight between record companies and TikTok.
Persons: Jay Graber, Erin Griffith, Figma, Google’s chatbots Organizations: Apple, Spotify, YouTube, New York Times
On Dec. 18, a $20 billion deal by Adobe, the software giant, to buy Figma, a San Francisco start-up darling, fell apart after more than a year of regulatory scrutiny. In a blog post that day, Dylan Field, Figma’s chief executive and co-founder, painted an optimistic picture of what would come next. Behind the scenes, the start-up, a design platform, is picking up the pieces. In recent weeks, Figma said it had reset its internal valuation to $10 billion — half of what Adobe planned to pay for it. Figma is also grappling with a tech industry that has been changed by a frenzy over artificial intelligence.
Persons: Dylan, , , Figma, Michael Amodeo Organizations: Adobe Locations: San Francisco
CNN —Amazon and iRobot, the maker of the popular Roomba vacuum, mutually called off their estimated $1.7 billion acquisition deal Monday, citing numerous regulatory hurdles. Amazon (AMZN), which was up about 0.5% in noon trading, will pay iRobot a previously agreed-upon $94 million cancellation fee. IRobot said the restructuring plan, impacting around 350 employees, is intended to save the company up to $150 million. In November, the European Commission said the deal could hamper competition in the robot vacuum sector. Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal reported that the European Commission planned to block the deal.
Persons: iRobot, Colin Angle, Glen Weinstein, IRobot, , ” Andrew Miller, iRobot’s, ” David Zapolsky, Lina Khan, , Meta Organizations: CNN, European, Federal Trade, European Union, European Commission, Wall Street Journal, Amazon, Federal Trade Commission, Commission, Amazon . Tech, Adobe, EU, UK, Nvidia, UK’s Competition, Markets Authority, Activision Blizzard, CMA Locations: Europe
LONDON (AP) — Amazon called off its purchase of robot vacuum maker iRobot on Monday, blaming “undue and disproportionate regulatory hurdles" after the European Union signaled its objection to the deal. The deal faced antitrust scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic, but most strongly in Europe, where regulators investigating competition concerns were expected to issue a final decision by Feb. 14. Amazon announced in 2022 that it would buy iRobot, maker of the circular-shaped Roomba vacuum, for $1.7 billion in cash. Political Cartoons View All 253 ImagesWhile British antitrust regulators cleared the purchase in June, it also still faced scrutiny in the U.S. by the Federal Trade Commission. This is the latest example of a deal involving U.S. companies that fell apart after facing scrutiny from European regulators.
Persons: iRobot, David Zapolsky, Amazon’s, Colin Angle, Glen Weinstein, Haleluya Hadero Organizations: European Union, Amazon, European Commission, Federal Trade Commission, U.S, Adobe, Biotech, ___ AP Locations: European, Europe, Bedford , Massachusetts, U.S, EU, New York
With the promise of generative AI fueling investment in technology, industry experts expect 2024 to be an active year for cloud software M&A. The market is right for buyers and sellers, as companies like Salesforce and Nvidia enter 2024 with cash on hand and mature startups face a slowed venture market. "There's so much demand for amazing talent in AI," Somasegar said. Deals in 2024 will likely be at smaller valuations, Jaluria noted. Jaluria expects that several companies that flourished during the pandemic — only to lose momentum with the rise in return-to-office mandates — are likely candidates for M&A in 2024.
Persons: Somasegar, Rishi Jaluria, Jaluria, Jaluria's Organizations: Business, Nvidia, Madrona Venture Group, RBC Capital Markets, Activision Locations: Seattle, Figma
As 2024 kicks off, the creator economy is having an identity crisis. "The venture-scale generational companies are, yes, creator companies, but they're also typically fitting into another bucket." Why the creator economy has been 'disappointing'Once pitched as a rocket-ship opportunity, service companies in the creator economy that focus on products for influencers haven't delivered, investors and industry professionals told BI. Although the phrase already existed, the world needed a new way to describe this prospering industry, and thus, the term "creator economy" entered the mainstream. Lia Haberman, an influencer marketing expert and instructor at UCLA Extension, described influencer marketing as separate from the services arm of the creator industry that has faltered.
Persons: Grant Long, Koji, hasn't, Rex Woodbury, they're, it's, Woodbury, Figma, haven't, Ollie Forsyth, They've, Benjamin Grubbs, I'm, Goldman Sachs, Lia Haberman, Haberman, upstarts, Logan Paul, KSI, Marshall Sandman Organizations: TikTok, YouTube, Business, VC, UCLA, North, PitchBook, Animal
Adobe shares dropped more than 6% in extended trading Wednesday after the software maker posted a lighter-than-expected forecast for 2024. Net income increased 26% to $1.48 billion, or $3.23 per share, up from $1.18 billion, or $2.53 per share, in the year-ago quarter. Adobe called for fiscal 2024 earnings per share of $17.60 to $18 on $ $21.3 billion to $21.5 billion in revenue. During the quarter Adobe increased the costs of some subscriptions. Prior to the after-hours move, Adobe shares were up almost 86% this year, outperforming the S&P 500 stock index, which has gained about 23%.
Persons: Wall, LSEG, Anil Chakravarthy, Shantanu Narayen, Narayen, Adobe Organizations: Adobe, Creative, Creative Cloud, European Commission, U.S . Department of Justice, DOJ, U.S . Federal Trade Commission, Restore, FTC, CNBC PRO Locations: LSEG
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