Trinity Venture Capital to list on AIM?

From Ireland.com,

Dublin-based Trinity Venture Capital is considering listing on
secondary stock markets in Dublin and London.

It is understood that the company has engaged Davy to advise it on the
move, and is considering floating on the IEX in Dublin and the
Alternative Investment Market in London.

The move is designed at raising funds to expand its investment
activities. Sources say the company could raise up to €50 million from
the move.

An investor roadshow is believed to be under way, and the listings are
expected to happen by the end of the summer.

When contacted, a spokeswoman for the group said: “Trinity Venture
Capital is currently in discussions with institutional investors
reviewing the many options available to them to raise new capital to
grow their existing portfolio of companies over the next number of
years.”

The listed company manages Trinity’s portfolio of investments. These
include: Norkom, a listed financial software company worth €166
million; Havok, a maker of games software and special effects for
films; Aepona, which supplies network solutions to the telecoms
industry; and CR2, a banking software provider.

A decision by Trinity to float would follow a similar move by Boundary
Capital, a Dublin-based investment group headed by financier Niall
McFadden. Boundary listed on the IEX and AIM on May 15th. Its shares,
which listed at €1 each, rose sharply in the first few days of trading
but have since fallen back to €1.09.

Trinity is one of Ireland’s biggest venture capital groups. Founded in
September 1997, it is led by chairman Shane Reihill and chief
executive John Tracey.

It has raised €163 million to date for two funds that have invested
primarily in early-stage technology companies in Ireland and the UK.

Trinity had two high-profile exits from investee companies in 2006 –
Similarity Systems, in which it owned about 27 per cent, was sold for
€45.4 million, while software group Steeltrace was bought for $20
million by US firm Compuware.

It is understood that Trinity has decided to refocus its strategy and
move into the private equity space.

This would see it participate in larger transactions, including
buy-outs, buy-ins, restructurings and public-to-private deals.

Mr Reihill is a former joint chief executive of fuel importers and
distributors Tedcastle Holdings, which he left in 2001. He has also
worked for Dillon Read Investment Bank in New York. He is currently
chairman of Norkom, which this week announced a 38 per cent increase
in its revenues to €25 million.

Mr Tracey is an engineer and initially worked in the semiconductor
industry before joining Deloitte & Touche as a management consultant.

In 1989 he moved into venture capital, and spent eight years with ICC
Venture Capital, which is now owned by Bank of Scotland. He has led
Trinity since its inception.

More Shameless self promotion (no sunglasses required)

Here is an interview (its a podcast) I did before the TV4B gig. A little more disjointed and a few clangers but at least you don’t get blinded by my dazzling forehead. Scroll forward to minute 00:28:55 to get to the start of the PutPlace bit.

Man dazzles audience with incredibly shiny head

http://st1.streamzilla.jet-stream.nl/tv4b/StroboScopeLoader.php?movieName=5197/5197582446615258d823a.flv&movieWidth=432&movieHeight=339&autoStart=1&playerType=2

I wan to buy a server but Dell won't let me





Dell the online is currently looping on this page for all queries regarding their servers. I didn’t bother to check anywhere else.

Fantastic.

Quick where can I short Dell shares?
(Update : Still down this morning!)

I just rang Dell and of course their sales line is oblivious to the problem. They then connected me to the technical help desk where an automated attendant wanted a service tag before proceeding.

This is a business that is predicated on Web Sales? Oy Vay!

What I want from Dell

A desktop and or laptop PC that just boots straight in Xen or VMWare. No windows, no Linux, just a pure virtual machine. Extra points for giving me the option to install a range of operating systems into that environment at config/purchase time.