Verticalnet, Inc. was a host of 43 business-to-business (B2B) procurement portals headquartered in Horsham, Pennsylvania.[2] At the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000, the company was worth $10.89 billion; it was acquired by Bravo Solutions in 2008 for $15.2 million, a 99.9% decline in value.

Verticalnet, Inc.
Founded1995; 31 years ago (1995)
FounderMichael McNulty
Michael Hagan
FateAcquired by Bravo Solutions (2008)
HeadquartersHorsham, Pennsylvania
RevenueDecrease $16 million (2006)
Decrease -$24 million (2006)
Total assetsDecrease $20 million (2006)
Total equityDecrease $2 million (2006)
Number of employees
88 (2006)
Footnotes / references
[1]

History

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Verticalnet was founded in 1995 by Michael McNulty and Michael Hagan with a site called WaterOnline.[2]

In 1997, Mark Walsh joined the company as its chief executive officer.

In 1999, on the first day of trading after its initial public offering, its shares increased in value by 180%, valuing the company at $1.6 billion; quarterly revenue was $3.6 million. The company had 1,300 advertisers, each of which were paying $6,000 per year. At that time, Internet Capital Group, now Actua Corporation, owned 28% of the company and founders Michael McNulty and Michael Hagan were each worth $60 million on paper.[2]

In 1999, the company lost $53.5 million on revenues of $18.4 million.[3]

In January 2000, the company received a $100 million investment from Microsoft.[4]

In March 2000, the company acquired Tradeum for 2 million shares of Verticalnet, worth $507 million at the time.[5][6]

During 2000, the dot-com bubble burst, and the market capitalization of the company fell from a peak of $10.89 billion on March 10, 2000 to $3.89 billion on May 4, 2000.[7]

In 2000, revenues increased to $112.5 million and the company posted a loss of $28.5 million.[7]

In December 2000, Verticalnet sold NECX, an exchange for electronic components and computer systems, to Converge for $60 million in cash and a 19.9% stake in Converge.[8]

In April 2001, Verticalnet restructured its agreement with Microsoft.[9]

In 2002, Verticalnet acquired Atlas Commerce for 14.3 million shares of Verticalnet common stock and $3.5 million of cash and the company relocated to Malvern, Pennsylvania.[10]

In 2002, VerticalNet sold its Small and Medium Business Group to Corry Publishing, now Jameson Publishing, for an up-front payment of $2.35 million and a four-year performance-based earn-out of $6.5 million, as well as the assumption of certain liabilities.[7][11]

In 2008, Bravo Solutions acquired Verticalnet for $15.2 million.[7][12][13]

References

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