|

ISP Broker Directory:
Cheval Capital
Cheval Capital's mergers and acquisitions work
runs the gamut from very small to very large transactions.
Hillary and Frank Stiff met back in the late '80s, when he was an investment
banker helping her telecom company raise capital. When that company was
acquired, she moved into investment banking as welland at that point,
the two say, they realized it just made sense to start their own firm
instead of working for other people. That firm, Cheval
Capital, is a boutique investment bank focusing on mergers and acquisitions
as well as financings and IPOs.
Cheval's first ISP client was Verio,
for whom the firm handled a series of acquisitions in the mid to late
'90s at valuation levels, Hillary says, that they haven't seen since.
"We had done work with Centennial Funds out in Denver, and when they started
Verio, they called us," she says. "We agreed to help them by doing their
acquisitions on the East Coast of ISPs and eventually of hosting companies
as well."
Having made it through the past decade, Hillary says they like to call
themselves historians. "It was interesting to watch internet and hosting
back in the embryonic stages, when everybody was so optimistic but often
basic principles weren't usedenthusiasm, caffeine and foosball were
generating the momentum in the industry," she jokes. "And it's really
come full circle: we've watched it grow up from a baby to become a mature
industry with lots of great, professional companies involved."
Big guys and smaller guys
Frank says Cheval works in two different ways. One is to get hired by
a venture-backed company like Verio that wants to do a series of acquisitions
over a period of years. "We'll help them put together a consolidation
program," he says. "We help them understand the documents, the business,
the valuations, the economics, soup to nuts."
The other way that Cheval works is as a clearinghouse for smaller buyers
and sellers. "As we become aware of buyers or sellers that are looking
to do a transaction, we have a deal list that we put them on, we distribute
it around, and we try to act as a facilitator to those guys to get transactions
done," Frank says. "When you're a big guy in the marketplace, it's easy
to get help and hire bankers and get things donebut when you're
a smaller guy, it's often much more difficult, and so we're trying to
help out that group."
For the larger transactions, fees are generally structured on the Lehman
scaleand for the clearinghouse, in which case Cheval is representing
the parties on both sides of the transaction, the buyer pays Cheval five
percent of the transaction fee. "If there was a significantly larger deal,
we may agree to a Lehman scale on it, but a lot of these are small, so
it's just a set five percent," Hillary says. "And we're paid when the
seller's paidso if the seller's paid over time, we'll take our fee
over time."
Letting referrals come in
The vast majority of Cheval's work, Hillary says, comes in through referrals.
"They find us," she says. "We're a small firm, and we don't advertise:
we've always been more than busy just by letting referrals come in for
the big clients. And the small ones come in just because we've been out
in the industry so long, and we do so many transactionswe've done
about 75 hosting/ISP transactions, 16 so far this yearand we've
been around since the dawn of time."
And there's really no size limitation on the deals Cheval will considerthe
only limitation, Hillary says, lies in the kind of business involved.
"Somebody may call up with some type of telecommunications company or
some type of ancillary software that I just know I don't have any buyers
on, so it doesn't make sense," she says. "But if it's something that I
think we'll have buyers for, we'll list it."
What makes an ISP attractive for purchase? Frank says the answer is
simplea well-run business and a reasonable expectation of value.
"The people that get transactions done the fastest are the ones that have
a sense of what the valuation in the marketplace is, and that valuation
is okay with them," he says. "And they run a clean businessthey've
got some sense of financial statements, they know how many customers they
have, they know what their attrition rates are, and they've got good control
of their information."
That kind of organization, Frank says, has become much easier to find
than it used to be. "More business and marketing people have moved into
the space, particularly in hosting, which has a lot of marketing folks
running businesses," he says. "It used to be mostly technical folksthere
were a lot of guys who started a webhosting company because they thought
it would be cool to do itand that's changed over time."
End
|