General Dynamics nabs networking cybersecurity vendor Fidelis

Contact: Ben Kolada

General Dynamics on Monday announced the acquisition of network security vendor Fidelis Security Systems. Fidelis’ customer profile and proximity to security operations at federal agencies appealed to General Dynamics as the defense giant looks to expand its cybersecurity capabilities against several competitors that have already announced inorganic moves in this market.

General Dynamics isn’t disclosing terms of the all-cash deal, but did say that Fidelis has approximately 70 employees. When we last wrote about Fidelis in February 2011, we noted that it had 52 employees and that its average deal size had steadily grown from $200,000 in 2008 to $350,000. At the time, the company had 62 customers (up from 21 in 2008).

We’ve written before about traditional military contractors moving toward cybersecurity as the government cuts back on traditional military spending. In June, Northrop Grumman printed a similar transaction, reaching for Australian network security systems integrator M5 Network Security. And in October 2011, ManTech International announced that it was acquiring network, security and systems integration and software development vendor Worldwide Information Network Systems for $90m. General Dynamics also bought Fortress Technologies, which provides wireless mesh network access points and software that enable US defense agencies to establish secure wireless LAN connections, in July 2011. We’ll have a full report on this deal in an upcoming Daily 451.

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JDS Uniphase tucks in GenComm as Wall Street focuses on earnings

Contact: Thejeswi Venkatesh, Ben Kolada

JDS Uniphase (JDSU) on Tuesday announced that after reselling GenComm’s test and measurement products, it has decided to acquire its OEM partner. GenComm provides wireless test and measurement hardware and software for troubleshooting, installation and maintenance of wireless base stations and repeaters.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but JDSU positioned the pickup as a tech and talent play, and further stated that revenue from GenComm’s products accounted for more than $7.5m of JDSU’s Communications Test and Measurement business division revenue in its fiscal 2012. The acquisition of Seoul-based GenComm will expand JDSU’s reach in the Asia-Pacific region.

The small tuck-in is likely to be quickly overshadowed by JDSU’s earnings call, which is scheduled after the closing bell today. Wall Street analysts expect the company’s fiscal year revenue to dip 7% to $1.67bn, due to the economic slowdown. JDSU isn’t the only company struggling in this sector, however. Danaher, a competitor to JDSU’s communications test and measurement business, recently reported Q3 earnings per share (EPS) below analysts’ estimates, and lowered its full-year 2012 EPS expectations.

VMware’s aggressive M&A of disruptive technologies

Contact: Brenon Daly

One of the highest compliments that can be paid to any technology company is to call it ‘disruptive.’ And by both organic and inorganic means, VMware has certainly earned that accolade. That’s on top of the more than $40bn of market value that it has also earned.

Starting with its homegrown server virtualization (a radically disruptive technology to the server industry), VMware has steadily expanded into other markets through M&A. Along the way, we’ve seen that at the root of disruption is conflict, with VMware’s acquisitions putting it on a collision course with vendors of various sizes in various markets.

For instance, VMware has taken some shots at Microsoft through purchases such as Zimbra and SlideRocket, which take aim at Microsoft cash cows Exchange and PowerPoint, respectively. More recently, VMware dropped $1.26bn on Nicira, a deal that could threaten Cisco Systems and other networking providers because Nicira’s technology effectively virtualizes networks.

And earlier this week, VMware bolstered its log management/analytics business by picking up Log Insight. The acquisition is a bit of an elbow jab at Splunk, which has collected a sky-high market capitalization of nearly $3bn as the market leader in log management/analytics. Of course, it’s important to keep these tussles in perspective – Splunk is still a Gold Sponsor at VMworld later this month.

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Dell as a mobile manager?

Contact: Ben Kolada, Rachel Chalmers, Chris Hazelton

Dell hasn’t hidden its intentions of leveraging its hardware legacy to extend into the enterprise IT market, particularly in regards to software. The PC and server giant recently reinforced its goals with the $2.6bn acquisition of systems management vendor Quest Software. But, as we point out in a recent report, its next move is likely to be in mobile management.

Former CA Technologies CEO and current head of Dell’s software division, John Swainson, made our job a bit easier. Swainson hasn’t been explicit with his plans, but we read some of his recent statements as a signal that Dell may make an imminent move into mobile device management.

That makes sense. Connected devices are the primary target for new applications. They’re also fountains of data that can be gleaned and distilled into BI – which is among the four focus areas for Dell’s software group: security, systems management, business intelligence and applications. In a report detailing the possible future of Dell’s mobile management, we prognosticate about how the company may move into this sector, and with whom. Click here to read the full report.

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Oracle adds network virtualization with Xsigo

Contact: Brenon Daly, John Abbott

A week after VMware made its network virtualization play with the blockbuster purchase of Nicira Networks, Oracle has expanded its own virtualization portfolio by reaching for I/O virtualization startup Xsigo Systems. Although both startups loosely fall into the category of ‘software defined networks’ (SDNs), Xsigo itself used that description only sparingly to talk about its business. And if we look deeper at the two deals by the serial acquirers, we see they’re actually quite different.

For starters, the targets were at very different stages of commercial deployment. Nicira only had a handful of customers, and we understand that it still measured its revenue in the single digits of millions of dollars. In contrast, Xsigo indicated that it had tallied roughly 550 deployments since it began shipping its product some five years ago. It was generating revenue in the tens of millions of dollars, according to our understanding.

Further, the strategic drivers for each of the networking acquisitions are quite different. For VMware, the purchase of Nicira represents its grand plan to do to switches through virtualization what it has already done to servers through virtualization. For Oracle, there’s arguably a more focused goal for Xsigo, at least in the near term. My colleague John Abbott speculates that Xsigo’s technology is likely to be deployed as a means of providing a broader virtualized network fabric to surround Oracle’s Exa family of systems, boosting the number of available network and storage connections and making them more suitable for hosting cloud services. Look for our full report on Oracle’s acquisition of Xsigo in tonight’s Daily 451.

VMware’s new era with Nicira

Contact: Brenon Daly

Having built a business valued in the tens of billions of dollars by virtualizing computing, VMware is now using its largest-ever acquisition in an effort to bring virtualization to networking. VMware will hand over a total of $1.26bn for startup Nicira. It’s a significant gamble for VMware, both strategically and financially.

The purchase is more than three times the size of VMware’s next-largest acquisition, and is roughly equal to the amount the virtualization kingpin has spent on its entire M&A program since parent company EMC spun off a small stake in VMware a half-decade ago. (VMware will cover the cost of the purchase from its treasury. As of the end of June, it held $5.3bn in cash and short-term investments, and it has generated $2bn in free cash flow over the past year.)

VMware has positioned Nicira, a company that only recently emerged from stealth, as a key component of its effort to put software at the core of datacenters. VMware has done that with servers – and to some degree, storage as well – by using software to essentially commodify hardware. It’s an approach that appears to undermine a once-cozy relationship with networking partner Cisco Systems. Incidentally, shares of the switch and router giant are currently at their lowest level in about a year, and it announced another round of layoffs at almost exactly the same time that VMware announced its big networking acquisition.

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NetScout pleases investors, telco customers

Contact: Ben Kolada

NetScout Systems on Thursday found itself in the fortunate position of pleasing both investors and customers. The company reassured its investors by announcing better-than-expected revenue in its FY 2013 first quarter, and in a separate announcement, also reassured its telco customers with the tuck-in acquisition of certain of Accanto Systems’ service assurance assets.

On the financial front, NetScout reported that revenue came in at the high end of its previously reported guidance. The company generated $76.4m in its FY 2013 first quarter, a 21% increase over the year-ago period and above the $74.7m that analysts had been expecting on average. Net income for the quarter grew 109%, to $5m. Shares of NetScout were up 12% in midday trading.

Somewhat overshadowed by NetScout’s earnings call was the small tuck-in acquisition of certain of Accanto’s service assurance assets. Accanto provides service assurance products that enable telcos to monitor and manage the delivery of voice services over converged telecom networks. NetScout is purchasing Helsinki-headquartered Accanto’s Pantera hardware probes and middleware and session analysis applications assets, which are based in Modena, Italy.

Although the acquisition announcement was secondary to the earnings release, the deal is still welcome news to NetScout’s telco customers. NetScout claims that the intent of the deal is to extend its own nGenius Service Assurance product’s control plane and data plane monitoring capabilities. NetScout said in the press release announcing the transaction that Accanto’s assets will bolster nGenius Service Assurance’s support for NGN voice services, including IP multimedia subsystems, and add incremental support for legacy circuit-switched voice, including SIGTRAN and SS7.

The acquisition, which includes the assumption of approximately 35 Accanto employees, is expected to be EPS-neutral. Mooreland Partners advised Accanto on the sale, which is expected to close this month.

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Gigamon eyes IPO even as a market stalls

Contact: Brenon Daly

Despite the crosscurrents in the IPO market, Gigamon has put in its paperwork for a planned $100m offering. The network traffic management vendor runs solidly in the black and has been increasing revenue at about a 50% clip in recent years. It finished 2011 with revenue of $68m and, assuming its growth rate continues, will wrap this year at roughly $100m. (Most of the revenue – between two-thirds and three-quarters of overall sales – comes from products, with associated services generating the remainder.)

Eight-year-old Gigamon competes with network heavyweights such as Cisco Systems and Juniper Networks, while a number of other companies have acquired technology that makes them rivals as well. Just in the past two months, Ixia paid $145m for Anue Systems while Danaher added VSS Monitoring. (Subscribers to 451 Research can see our full report on the transaction, including our estimate of the undisclosed terms.)

The proposed offering from Gigamon comes at a time when the IPO market is still struggling to find its footing: On the same day Gigamon put in its S-1, MobiTV withdrew its. And while the market should get a bit hotter this week with the expected debut of Palo Alto Networks, many investors are still underwater on their Facebook shares. The IPO of the fast-growing social networking firm was supposed to serve as a catalyst for the market, but instead deteriorated into a mishandled offering that has sparked lawsuits and losses.

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Shallow pool in mobile optimization becoming shallower

Contact: Ben Kolada

After Allot Communications dipped its toes into the pool of mobile optimization targets by acquiring small Ortiva Wireless, Citrix cannonballed with the acquisition of Bytemobile. These two deals significantly drained the already shallow pool of acquisition targets in this market. Interested buyers should dismiss the ‘don’t run when wet’ precaution, and jump in before there’s no water left.

Consumers are buying data-intensive devices in droves, and data consumption is exploding as a result. Because seamless data use is considered a right rather than a privilege these days, cell carriers unable to provide flawless transmission risk customer desertion. Tackling this concern, mobile operators are employing every option available to relieve their bandwidth bottlenecks, including relying on a new breed of mobile traffic optimization firms.

As these upstarts emerge as viable solutions, they’re becoming increasingly attractive acquisition targets both for the vendors that traditionally have served telcos, and for non-traditional vendors hoping to pull in cash-rich telco customers.

However, interested acquirers need to move fast. In a recent report, we identified 11 remaining vendors, ranging from pre-revenue firms to established midmarket players. But less than half of those vendors target mobile optimization as their core business. Click here to see who we think may be next in the buyout line.

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Persistence may not pay off for Vodafone

Contact: Ben Kolada, Thejeswi Venkatesh

After three deadline extensions and interest from competitor Tata Communications, Vodafone Group announced on Monday its latest attempt to acquire Cable & Wireless Worldwide (CWW). Vodafone is offering £1bn, or approximately $1.7bn, to buy CWW. However, its offer has already hit a roadblock. CWW’s largest shareholder, Orbis, which owns 19% of the company, has rejected the bid on the grounds that it undervalues CWW. Vodafone initially expressed interest in acquiring CWW on February 13.

Orbis’ argument does hold some ground. Although Vodafone’s offer represents a 92% per-share premium to when the deal was originally announced, it still values CWW below some precedent transactions. Vodafone is valuing CWW at half times revenue and just 2.7x EBITDA for the 12 months ending September 30, 2011. In comparison, US cable company Knology recently sold to WideOpenWest for 2.8x sales and 8x EBITDA, while SureWest Communications was valued at 2.2x revenue and 6.8x EBITDA in its sale to Consolidated Communications in February. For more business-focused comparisons, PAETEC was valued at 1.3x sales and 8.4x EBITDA in its sale to Windstream Communications in August 2011. Level 3 Communications paid 1.1x revenue and 7.3x EBITDA for Global Crossing in April 2011.

Given the strategic significance of this deal to Vodafone, we expect that the company could appease Orbis with a higher bid. We’ve previously written that Vodafone, which is light on its fixed-line capacity in the UK, would likely use the acquisition to enable more bandwidth availability for its mobile users. The UK wireless operator will be able to take advantage of CWW’s vast infrastructure to backhaul its own cellular services, rather than rely on third-party operators. Throughout the wireless industry, cellular operators are increasingly feeling their networks squeezed as users consume more and more high-bandwidth data. Further, with £7.7bn ($12bn) of cash and marketable securities in its treasury, Vodafone could certainly afford a higher offer.