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2015-05-08 04:06:50
Eat or be eaten
With a wave of consolidation in prospect, America s big internet firms look set
to divide into predators and prey
May 9th 2015 | SAN FRANCISCO
EVEN at charity auctions, technology titans like large transactions. At a
recent fundraiser for Tipping Point, an anti-poverty charity in San Francisco,
guests swiftly bid up the price for a package of Super Bowl tickets in
increments of $100,000. The fortunes made by Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are
so vast that the event effortlessly raised $14m. Guests tossed yellow confetti
round the room in celebration.
Companies in the Valley are big spenders too. Last year around $184 billion of
mergers and acquisitions were struck in the American technology industry,
according to Dealogic, a research firm. There will be even more this year. This
week speculation grew that Salesforce, a provider of cloud-based business
software, had received several approaches Microsoft and Oracle were said to be
among those interested, though another, SAP, ruled itself out. Recent stumbles
by Twitter and LinkedIn make them vulnerable; and a number of other internet
firms are big enough to be an appetising prospect, but not too big to be
swallowed up. Unlike, say, Google, most do not have founders with controlling
stakes that could prevent a takeover.
With a current stockmarket value of $48 billion, Salesforce would not come
cheap. But many of America s biggest technology firms are rolling in money:
Microsoft, for one, has $95 billion in cash and short-term investments on its
balance-sheet. Among the top ten American firms with the largest cash hoards
(excluding financial firms), six are technology firms, led by Apple, and they
have saved up a combined $485 billion. This, plus their high share prices,
gives the tech industry s potential predators unprecedented firepower as they
go hunting. Furthermore, a variety of other companies, from old-media firms to
Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent, are also scouting round the
Valley with the intent of getting more familiar with American online
businesses.
Although exuberance about the internet sector s growth prospects has lifted the
shares of many firms, doubts are growing about the ability of some to continue
their impressive winning streaks. Recently Twitter and LinkedIn, two social
networks, missed earnings forecasts, sending their shares falling by around 28%
and 21% respectively. Sustained underperformance could drive down public firms
prices and make some of them easier targets.
With a $24 billion market capitalisation (down from around $33 billion a month
ago), Twitter is still a large bird to swallow; and it has been buying up
smaller firms over the past few years to help it grow. However, its management
has disappointed investors, who had hoped the firm would scale up faster.
Unless that changes, another internet firm could swoop.
Google is the most obvious buyer. Twitter s main problem is that advertisers
still see it as a niche proposition. Google, the giant of online ads, could
help solve this. The relationship between the two firms is growing closer. When
Twitter reported its earnings on April 28th, it announced a partnership with
Google to help it sell and measure the effectiveness of ads. Tencent, a Chinese
firm that owns a popular messaging service, WeChat, may also be interested,
although the American government would cringe at seeing a platform for free
speech go to a Chinese owner.
Midsized, advertising-supported firms have struggled of late, as it has become
clearer that some will not add users and revenues as quickly as once hoped. In
other words, online advertising can be a tough business for firms that are not
named Google or Facebook , says Brian Wieser of Pivotal Research, who studies
the industry. Four firms Google, Facebook, Baidu and Alibaba control half of
all digital advertising worldwide. Yelp, a firm that hosts online reviews and
makes money from local ads, is one of the most obvious take-out candidates,
says Mark Mahaney of RBC Capital Markets, an investment bank.
Yahoo, a darling of the late 1990s internet bubble, is a constant subject of
takeover speculation. It is in the process of spinning out its lucrative
investment in Alibaba, and is exploring the sale of its stake in Yahoo Japan.
After that Yahoo s chief executive, Marissa Mayer, will have run out of tricks
to placate investors. Analysts and investors have urged a merger between Yahoo
and AOL, another web portal, to save on costs, but one obstacle is that both Ms
Mayer and Tim Armstrong, AOL s boss, want to keep their jobs.
Yahoo, which has billions of dollars in free cash, could also be attractive to
a private-equity firm, or to an old-fashioned media firm that wants to
strengthen its online-video assets. Comcast, which recently dropped its bid to
buy a rival cable company, Time Warner Cable, because of antitrust worries, has
cash to spare and will be wondering where else to spend it.
Hunting is easier when you divide a herd. eBay and PayPal, now part of the same
company, will split later this year, but how long will they stay independent?
eBay s online-auction business has lost users to other shopping websites, such
as Amazon. Alibaba, which owns Taobao, a Chinese equivalent to eBay, could find
it appealing. PayPal, which facilitates online transactions, could also be
attractive to banks and credit-card companies, like American Express, which
want to strengthen their position in mobile and online payments.
Some companies will want to expand in areas where they are already strong, the
better to fight off other competitors. That may risk the wrath of regulators.
The advantage you have with the internet is that the regulatory regimes are not
as aware about the dominance you can create in platforms, and therefore you can
create monopolies, says a big investor in internet stocks. Google, which has
come under intense scrutiny from European regulators, may beg to differ: it may
even be dissuaded from doing any big deals until the political climate
improves.
Interactive: How has the US technology sector changed since 1980?
Other firms will want to hedge their bets by investing in new fields unrelated
to their core revenue streams. Microsoft, for example, is in the business of
selling software, but it is not inconceivable that, if not Salesforce, it could
buy LinkedIn, a professional social network. It is cheaper to do this early,
however, before the potential of the firm or field is proved. Last year
Facebook, an especially active acquirer, bought Oculus VR, a virtual-reality
company, for $2 billion. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook s boss, was not quite sure
what he would do with it, but he knew the young firm would become more
valuable.
The more mature each bit of the internet business becomes, the more
consolidation there will be. Mr Mahaney of RBC points to the online-travel
business as an example of what might happen elsewhere, such as among the social
networks. The online-travel and booking sector rose in the late 1990s, with
many firms fighting it out, but in America it is now dominated by just two big
firms, Priceline and Expedia.
Much of the future of dealmaking in Silicon Valley will hinge on valuations,
low interest rates and the equity market s health. Some look at Twitter s and
LinkedIn s recent falls and wonder whether they are the tremors before the
earthquake , in the words of a venture capitalist. So far the tectonic plates
appear to have settled, and investors worries remain focused on specific
companies that have missed targets. However, some still wonder if a big,
widespread correction among internet firms is on the way. The industry s
cash-rich giants would surely relish this: what better time to strike than when
prices have slumped and investors are keen to sell.
From the print edition: Business