Massively brings you complete coverage from the Warhammer Online beta!

After DoubleClick home run, Hellman & Friedman raised $8.4 billion fund

Private equity firm Hellman & Friedman LLC has been around since 1984. Over the years, the firm has built a tremendous team and expertise in a variety of domains.

And it paid off last week, when the fund sold DoubleClick to Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) for a cool $3.1 billion (it was a 10X return over a couple years).

So, it's no surprise that H&F has raised its new fund – which stands at $8.4 billion (it's the firm's sixth fund). No doubt, with deals like DoubleClick, H&F has a lot of happy limited partners. One is the powerful California Public Employees' Retirement System.

Interestingly enough, H&F has already put its money to work from the new fund. That is, the firm recently agreed to buy Kronos Worldwide Incorporated (NYSE: KRON).

Although, to try to find good deals, it looks like H&F is ramping its global operations. And it certainly has the resources to do it.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including the Complete M&A Handbook and the EDGAR-Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements.

Google buys DoubleClick for $3.1 billion from Hellman & Friedman

Google has agreed to buy DoubleClick for the (let's just say it) outrageous price of $3.1 billion. Has the dotcom boom returned? I remember when DoubleClick, Inc. was cool before, back in 1999. When I graduated from business school, one of my best friends went to work there. She loved her job (which was largely managing the integration of acquisitions, it seemed) but even then the company was in turmoil -- I can remember frequent tales of colleagues and supervisors scattering to go to sexier dotcoms, or bigger, more reliable companies.

And then, about the time my friend left, DoubleClick lost its aging appeal and was a necessary evil. In April 2005, the company fetched $1.1 billion when it was taken private by Hellman & Friedman and JMI Equity. Since then, the firms have sold off bits of DoubleClick here or there for tidy, small profits. A few weeks ago, the whispers began: a bidding war for DoubleClick had begun, with Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) with their paddles raised highest, some said (yikes!) as high as $2 billion.

The return for Hellman & Friedman has been pegged at a whopping 800%, making this a huge success for them at the same time it concerns many web publishers, who can only worry that Google has now truly become all-powerful. Could it be that Google and Microsoft will soon be considered in the same light? Or will Google's good-guy image survive?

I'm sure little companies all over -- and the firms who fund them -- will treat this news with rejoicing, and vie to be the first knocking on Google's door to be the next outrageous sale.

BloggingBuyouts is provided for informational purposes only. Nothing on the service is intended to provide personally tailored advice concerning the nature, potential, value or suitability of any particular security, portfolio or securities, transaction, investment strategy or other matter. You are solely responsible for any investment decisions that you make. The contributors who provide the content of BloggingBuyouts may, from time to time, hold positions in the securities discussed at the time of writing and they may trade for their own accounts. Such holdings will be disclosed at the time of writing. By using the site, you agree to abide to BloggingBuyouts' Terms of Use.

Terms of Use

Deals
Alliance Boots, bidding war, 2007 (2)
Bausch and Lomb, $3.7b, 2007 (1)
Blackstone, IPO, 2007 (44)
Chrysler, $7.5b, 2007 (27)
DoubleClick, $3.1b, Apr 2007 (2)
Express Stores, $548m, 2007 (2)
Harman Int'l, 2007 (7)
Laureate, $3.1b, 2007 (1)
Palm Inc, 2007 (1)
Sallie Mae, $25b, 2007 (16)
Travelport, $4.3b, Aug 2006 (1)
TXU Inc., 2007 (16)
Features
Activist investing (126)
Top deals (61)
Firms
Apax Partners (8)
Apollo Management (41)
Bain Capital (65)
Cerberus Capital (48)
Citigroup (11)
Clayton, Dubilier and Rice Inc. (8)
Golden Gate Partners (1)
GS Capital Partners (29)
J.C. Flowers (18)
KKR (97)
Madison Dearborn Partners (23)
Merrill Lynch (5)
Morgan Stanley Capital Partners (5)
Permira (5)
Providence Equity Partners (14)
Silver Lake Partners (17)
Texas Pacific Group (64)
The Blackstone Group (153)
The Carlyle Group (67)
Thoma Cressey Equity Partners (0)
Thomas H. Lee Partners (25)
Warburg Pincus (9)
Welsh, Carson, Anderson and Stowe (3)
News
Deals (626)
Engagements (103)
Financials and analyticals (79)
Investments (218)
Management (113)
Management fees (18)
Movers and shakers (55)
Private equity industry (310)
Public or private? (200)
Raising money (136)
Rumors (182)
Shareholders (97)
Taxes and regulations (39)
Value and lack thereof (120)
Venture capital industry (46)

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Sponsored Links

BloggingBuyouts bloggers (30 days)

#BloggerPostsCmts
1Tech Confidential130
2Tom Taulli80
3Zac Bissonnette40
4Michael Rainey20
5Paul Foster10
6Brian White10

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: