Finance in 2006 seemed to boom in nearly every corner: Mergers and acquisitions, buyouts, private equity and alternative investments -- all but initial public offerings.
It's not that IPOs had a bad year, at least compared with the past several years. And many people were encouraged by the modest yet sober performance of the IPO market as a whole. According to Renaissance Capital, 197 companies went public, raising $42 billion, compared with 194 companies raising $34 billion in 2005. The average deal size rose to $215 million from $175 million last year.
Renaissance said that the average return of newly public companies was 23% in
2006, well above major market indexes. But in a worrying sign, some of
the biggest laggards came from technology, including voice-over-Internet protocol company
Vonage
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