Best Buy buys outside the box

Contact: Brenon Daly

Best Buy continues to buy outside the box. The consumer electronics giant, which has more than 1,000 big-box stores, announced a pair of deals Monday that add to its emerging businesses that have been responsible for most of the company’s recent growth. In the larger of its purchases, Best Buy will pay $1.3bn to pick up full ownership of its US and Canadian mobile phone business, which had been run as a joint venture with British retailer Carphone Warehouse Group. Additionally, Best Buy will pay $167m for mindSHIFT Technologies, a managed service provider that has about 5,400 small business customers.

The transactions continue a revamp of Best Buy, which started out life as an audio equipment store in 1966. More recently, it has made several acquisitions to expand beyond its historic business. For instance, it bought Geek Squad in 2002 to provide helpdesk support for customers. Service revenue, which has been bolstered by Geek Squad, currently accounts for 7% of the roughly $50bn in sales Best Buy will record this year, and it’s one of the few business lines that has actually increased same-store sales so far this year.

While the Geek Squad pickup has paid off for Best Buy, others have been disappointments. The retailer paid almost $700m for mall-based CD retailer Musicland in 2001, just as the business got ambushed by online music. More recently, it spent $97m in a puzzling purchase of Speakeasy, an Internet service provider. And then there’s the $121m acquisition in September 2008 of Napster. While some of those M&A missteps may have hurt Best Buy, they’ve been nothing like the stumble by its main rival, Circuit City. The company, which pioneered the electronic superstore model, got liquidated in 2009.

The single most accretive tech acquisition ever

Contact: Brenon Daly

With the passing of Steve Jobs earlier this week and all the deserved praise for the late Apple impresario, we can add one more tribute from the world of M&A: Jobs is the central figure in what’s probably the most accretive tech deal ever done. Remember that it was the purchase in December 1996 of the company that he founded after initially getting fired from Apple (NeXT Computer) that brought Jobs back to Apple.

So viewed that way, the once-and-future king at Apple only got to play that role because Apple acquired NeXT for some $400m. Without that deal, there’s every chance that Jobs wouldn’t have returned to Infinite Loop, and that the company would have simply continued on its path toward irrelevance in the PC Era. Instead, Job worked his magic, introducing computers, music players, phones, tablets and other products that customers may not have known they wanted but found they couldn’t live without.

To get some sense of the impact of Jobs’ return to Apple, consider this: when Apple acquired NeXT, shares of the company were in the single digits. They closed Thursday at $377. Under Jobs’ watch, shares rose almost 6,000%, giving it a current market valuation of $350bn. Apple currently enjoys the richest market cap of any company on the planet. And all that came from a deal that was part IP and part HR.