A different point of view on Comcast / Disney / 21st Century Fox outcomes

Dan Primack (Axios Pro Rata) gives an alternative view on Comcast/Disney/Fox:


Unconventional wisdom: It may be time for Brian Roberts and Bob Iger to put their animosity and egos aside, and at least consider a Comcast-Disney merger. It would largely solve each company's primary problem (content for Comcast, distribution for Disney) and the added firepower could let them overpay for Sky without also overpaying for Fox (thus guaranteeing Comcast much of the international distribution it craves). It's not a perfectly elegant solution, particularly since ABC would probably have to be carved out. But, as things currently stand, the only person who knows he'll be smiling at the end is Rupert Murdoch.



https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-pro-rata-a94f3b40-b748-4864-9249-
bf09e37c39eb.html

Comcast is fighting hard to remain a top-tier media/telecom firm, but Primack suggests it
may not have enough financial weight to maintain that status during the ongoing consolidation.



Lambertville-based RobustWealth, Acquired by Principal Finance Group, is Staying in New Jersey and Hiring

Lambertville-based RobustWealth, Acquired by Principal Finance Group, is Staying in New Jersey and hiring.





Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com



The RobustWealth team celebrates the startup's acquisition. | Courtesy RobustWealth

RobustWealth (Lambertville) a fintech startup we profiled here , was acquired by Principal Financial Group (Des Moines, Iowa) for an undisclosed amount. Principal completed its acquisition of RobustWealth on July 2, 2018

In an interview with RobustWealth founder Mike Kerins last month, NJTechWeekly.com learned that the company would be staying in New Jersey and hiring here. Financial details were not disclosed.

“We’d been working with Principal for over eight months, and it was a great relationship. It’s kind of like dating. Along the way we got to know each other really well, and it made a lot of sense for us to partner even deeper,” Kerins told us.

The startup had been working to integrate RobustWealth’s robo solution with Principal’s investment products and was coming up to a product launch when serious discussions ensued. “They began to look at it as an opportunity for them to get into the digital advice space,” he said. “Culturally, we are a great fit, and the two organizations look to provide solutions to clients in the same way.”

RobustWealth is staying in Lambertville, said Kerins. “We have just booked another 9,000 square feet [an addition to 8,000 square feet in existing space] in Lambertville which we are building out. We are trying to hire one employee a week until the end of the year, so we are expanding here.”

For their part, Principal Financial Group wants “us to maintain our startup culture, the ability to pivot quickly, and launch products fast. The management team will remain the same,” Kerins explained.

Being acquired offers RobustWealth a number of benefits, too. “This will allow us to develop a better product," Kerins said. “Our group will get to connect with Principal’s solutions, such as 401Ks, annuities and mutual funds, which are things we don’t currently have… Also, rather than spending a lot of time raising capital, now I can focus on the products and the company,”

“Plus, the sale gives a lot of certainty to the employees, he added. “There are some benefits to being part of a big company.” Kerins told his employees “that they get all the benefits of being in a startup including doing cool stuff and wearing jeans and a T-shirt to work, but also getting benefits like a great 401K, certainty around funding, job security and such.”

“Having a big company behind RobustWealth will allow us to complete our mission of having a complete robotized platform faster," Kerins noted. “The mission is the same, but with money to hire people, we can accomplish it faster and better now.”

Kerins had nothing but praise for the VCs who had invested in RobustWealth from the start. “Waldon [Venture Capital] is a great firm and Larry [Marcus] has become a good friend. They’ve been extremely helpful over this journey and I’m grateful to have had them support us,” he said.

According to an article in Investment News, RobustWealth will remain open architecture, offering investment products from other providers to advisers outside Principal, and the company is still actively looking to add more custodians to the platform.

When asked why Principal is taking this approach instead of making RobustWealth proprietary, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer Tim Dunbar said “the company realized an opportunity to invest in a relatively early-stage company and develop a unique product” the article continued.

RobustWealth also provides Principal an inroad to the Registered Investment Advisor, investment banking divisions of larger banks and community banks market, which Principal manages a combined $8.9 trillion, the article stated.

"We would hope to provide a lot of our investment solutions," Dunbar also said in the article. "We really want to continue to help advisers grow, and that's part of it."

"More than anything we share a common vision for where we think digital advice should go," he added.


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is republished here with her permission.




Philly Tech News Daily Page 7/2: Axciom sells Mrktg Services unit; renames as LiveRamp; Delaware awards $738,000 single-bid blockchain contract to IBM



PhillyTechNews Daily Page 6/25-26



Looking back at some past GE ads

Tom Paine




 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email





Its too early to be writing obituaries for GE. But in anticipation of that time, we can start reminiscing about some of its great ads:

GE: "We bring good things to life" was the main corporate umbrella ad for many years (BBDO, 1979-2003, which ia a very long time). It was an effort to convince consumers that GE was more than nuclear bombs, nuclear plants, airplane engines that occasionally malfunctioned, and an awful NBC before Comcast took control.









The GE Healthcare / Matrix ad was classic, really pushing the envelope in corporate advertising. GE hired Agent Smith of 'The Matrix'. (Connected Hospital,BBDO, 2013)

Today GE announced plans to sell 20% of GE Healthcare and spin off the remainder to shareholders.






And a recent ad targeted for the Olympics:




PhillyTechNews Daily Page 6/24: Comcast could be forced to raise Sky bid ; SAP aims to double CRM business in two years: sales chief



PhillyTech PeopleNews 6/24: Troubled Outcome Health names Publicis' McNally CEO; N.Y. Mayor Taps Drexel Professor For First Algorithm Quality-Control Task Force



Matt McNally / Publicis

Subscribe to Philly Tech People News by Email





Sarah Sanders not welcome in public place in Virginia




PhillyTechNews Daily Page 6/22: Plymouth Meeting-based CRF Health on the block, WSJ reports




Plymouth Meeting-based CRF Health is on the block, the Wall Street Journal reports .

CRF Health makes or supplies electronic assessment technology (EDC) used in clinical trials. Founded in 2000, CRF also has offices in the UK, Finland and Poland. It has 609 employees listed on LinkedIn, of which about 180 are in the Philadelphia area. Timo Ahopelto, Jarkko Joki-Tokola and Jaakko Ollila are the founders, though they do not appear to be active in the business now. Technically, its headquarters is in Finland.

CRF has had a string of PE owners before being acquired by the European PE firm Vitruvian Partners in January 2015. CRF has reportedly hired Jeffries to pursue the sale. It generates EBITDA of €40 million ($46.3 million), the Journal said. My guess is that it would fetch a few hundred million.

Vitruvian also owns Phlexglobal, a UK-based electronic clinical trial master file vendor with offices in Malvern, but that business, which Vitruvian's website states has sales of €25 million ($29 million), is not involved in the sale. Vitruvian Partners' website says CRF has sales of €100 ($117 million) .

The question is, will the buyer be strategic or financial?

The market is not set in stone, but rather is still experiencing considerable change. For instance, Veeva Systems (VEEV) recently entered the market with its own proprietary EDC offering.




a class="twitter-timeline" data-partner="tweetdeck" href="https://twitter.com/phillytechnews/timelines/1010115984269676544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">june22 - Curated tweets by phillytechnews


BTIG's Rich Greenfield on Disney-Comcast bidding war from CNBC.



PhillyTechNews Daily Page 6/19: How Ring went from Shark Tank reject to Amazon’s $1B acquisition; King of Prussia is becoming more than a mall now