Microsoft Nears $7 Billion-Plus Deal for Skype

By ANUPREETA DAS And NICK WINGFIELD

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703730804576313932659388852.html

Microsoft Corp. is close to a deal to buy Internet phone company Skype 
Technologies SA for more than $7 billion, and a deal could be announced as 
early as Tuesday, people familiar with the matter said.

Negotiations were wrapping up Monday evening, and a deal could still fall 
apart, the people cautioned. Representatives for Microsoft and Skype declined 
to comment.

A deal represents Microsoft's most aggressive move yet to play in the 
increasingly-converged worlds of communication, information and entertainment. 
Skype connects more than 663 million users around the world via Internet-based 
telephony and video, making it a key technology platform for a new generation 
of Web-savvy consumers. During 2010, those users made 207 billion minutes of 
voice and voice video calls over Skype.

Buying Skype would give Microsoft a recognized brand name on the Internet at a 
time when it is struggling to get more traction in the consumer market. The 
company has invested heavily in marketing and improving the technology of its 
Bing search engine. While it has made some market share gains over the past 
year, Google Inc. still dominates the search market with more than 65% of U.S. 
searches going through its site.

At a value over $7 billion, the Skype deal would rank at or near the top of the 
biggest acquisitions in the 36-year history of Microsoft, a company that 
traditionally has shied away from large deals. In 2007, Microsoft paid 
approximately $6 billion to acquire online advertising firm aQuantive Inc. Many 
current and former Microsoft executives believe Microsoft significantly 
overpaid for that deal. But they are also relieved that Microsoft gave up on an 
unsolicited $48 billion offer for Yahoo Inc. nearly three years ago. Yahoo is 
valued at half that sum today.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer, though, sees the Internet as an 
essential battleground for Microsoft, a company that still makes the vast bulk 
of its profits from Windows and Office software systems. Investors have become 
increasingly concerned about Microsoft's ability to squeeze continued growth 
out of those businesses, as rival technologies from Apple, Google and others 
put more pressure on profits.

The Microsoft division behind the company's hugely lucrative Office suite of 
applications also makes a product, known as Lync, which ties together email, 
instant messaging and voice communications into a single application. Skype 
could strengthen that offering.

The deal shows how far Skype has come since it was launched in 2003 by Niklas 
Zennstrom and Janus Friis, two men who had created a file-sharing technology 
called Kazaa that became widely associated with music piracy. While Skype was 
initially popular with techies, it increasingly worked its way into the 
mainstream by offering free or cheap phone calls which were especially 
appealing to international callers.

When EBay purchased the company in 2005 for $2.6 billion in cash and stock, 
Skype was regarded as something of an experiment, in which EBay's buyers and 
sellers would use the service to communicate about potential transactions.

The experiment faltered, and EBay gave up on Skype in 2007, taking a $1.4 
billion charge on the investment. It sold a 70% stake to a group of technology 
investors including Silver Lake Partners, venture capital firms Index Ventures 
and Andreessen Horowitz, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, who will 
make a handomse return on the Microsoft transaction.

For all its promise, Skype has had a mixed history as an operating business. It 
has produced little net profit in the eight years since it was founded. Profits 
continue to remain elusive as the company expands its business worldwide. Last 
year the company posted revenue of $860 million and $264 million in operating 
profits, but still lost $7 million. The company had $686 million in long-term 
debt as of Dec. 31.

Skype uses a technology called voice over Internet protocol, which treats calls 
as data like email messages and routes them over the Internet, rather than a 
traditional phone network. Skype's software, which can be downloaded free, 
allows users to call other Skype users on computers or certain cellphones for 
free. Skype users can also call land lines for a fee and conduct video calls.

Skype could play a role in Microsoft's effort to turnaround its fortunes in the 
mobile phone market, an area where it has lagged badly behind rivals Apple Inc. 
and Google. The company last year launched a new operating system for mobile 
phones known as Windows Phone 7 that has been well reviewed by technology 
critics but hasn't yet meaningfully improved Microsoft's market share.

Microsoft will likely need to tread carefully, though, in integrating Skype 
into its mobile software because of the potential for pushback from wireless 
carriers, whose support Microsoft badly needs. Skype could give consumers a way 
to make cheap phone calls over the Internet from mobile phones, without paying 
higher rates to the carriers.

Last August, Skype filed documents to go public but put its IPO plans on hold 
after bringing in a new chief executive, Tony Bates. Skype had expected to 
raise close to $1 billion through its IPO, people familiar with the matter said 
at the time. At the same time, the Luxembourg-based company entertained 
conversations in the past with potential buyers and joint-venture partners, 
including Facebook Inc., Google and Cisco, according to other people familiar 
with the matter. Skype had sought between $5 billion and $6 billion to sell 
itself, they added. The blog GigaOm earlier reported news of Microsoft's 
interest in Skype.

—Spencer E. Ante contributed to this article.
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to