eBay to buy Skype for $2.6 billion in cash, stock
Published: September 12, 2005, 4:48 AM PDT
By Reuters
http://news.com.com/eBay+to+buy+Skype+for+2.6+billion+in+cash%2C+stock/2100-
1030_3-5860055.html?tag=nefd.top

eBay has agreed to buy the fast-growing Internet start-up Skype in a move to
add free Web telephone calls to its online auctions and fuel growth, the
companies confirmed Monday.

eBay said it plans to pay $1.3 billion in cash and $1.3 billion in stock for
the Web communications company. It would make a further payout of up to $1.5
billion by 2008 or 2009 if financial targets are met, giving the deal a
total value of up to $4.1 billion, executives of the two companies said.

eBay is renowned for an Internet business model linking millions of buyers
and sellers, but its core U.S. market is maturing, slowing to annual growth
of between 20 percent and 30 percent a year, compared with 50 percent
international growth.

Skype, which said it expects revenue of $60 million this year and more than
$200 million in 2006, has raced to the lead in the booming Net telephony
market, which is being aggressively targeted by online powerhouses like
Yahoo, Google and Microsoft.

In just two years, Skype has attracted 54 million members to its free
Internet-based voice service and is on pace to roughly double in size within
a year.

Skype, whose software allows consumers to make free or low-cost phone calls
anywhere in the world via the Internet, would be the biggest acquisition so
far for 10-year-old eBay.

"We are really buying a new business," eBay Chief Financial Officer Rajiv
Dutta said in a phone interview.

He drew parallels to eBay's expansion into online payments with its $1.5
billion acquisition in 2002 of PayPal, which drew initial criticism as a bid
to compete in the banking business but thrust eBay into the lead of the
online-payment market.

"Is eBay diverting from its core business?" Dutta asked of Skype. "Nothing
could be further from the truth."

PayPal is on track for $1 billion in sales in 2005, Dutta noted. "We see the
same kind of opportunity here with Skype."

Luxembourg-based Skype offers a free service when users make
computer-to-computer calls to other Skype users. Charges apply when Skype
users make calls to regular phone numbers.

But in a move to strengthen the bonds between eBay buyers and sellers, the
company will also encourage eBay merchant sites to use Skype software to
allow customers with last-minute sales questions to click to talk to a
customer service agent.

Executives of the two companies justified the combination by saying that the
power of so-called "click-to-call" services to convert shoppers into buyers
represents a far more lucrative form of selling proposition than advertising
can. Skype also plans to add video calling and other features to its
software.

"Once we integrate communications into e-commerce, we think that (Skype) is
going to remove considerable friction" from the buying and selling process,
Dutta said.

Nearly half Skype's users live in Europe, a quarter are in Asia and an
eighth are in North America, providing eBay with a large immediate audience
as it seeks to expand outside of its core North America market, where rapid
growth is stabilizing.

The deal is expected to complete in the fourth quarter.

Skype expects to generate $60 million in revenue this year and more than
$200 million during 2006, Skype's chief operating officer, Michael Jackson,
said in a joint interview with Dutta. The company has yet to post a profit,
he said, adding that business users account for 25 percent of Skype's
audience.

The acquisition will cut eBay's earnings by a penny per share in each
quarter until the end of 2006 before it begins to positively contribute to
eBay's profitability, Dutta said.

eBay must convince analysts and investors that the deal is necessary to
stoke new streams of revenue growth and is worth the multibillion-dollar
price paid.

"We have some very high goals...related to active users, gross profits and
revenue," Dutta said. "(The goals) would translate into very significant
value creation for eBay," he added, though he declined to spell out the
targets.

While allowing potential benefits from providing communications services
between buyers and sellers, particularly in China, Goldman Sachs analyst
Anthony Noto said in a note to clients Friday that a licensing partnership
could accomplish this without requiring eBay to buy Skype.



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