Where’s the hurry in Oracle’s reach for Sun?

Contact: Brenon Daly

Having gotten the all clear on this side of the Atlantic, Oracle is now waiting for the EU to sign off on its pending purchase of Sun Microsystems. And the company will have to wait a bit longer. The European Commission has a deadline of September 3 to determine if the deal would violate antitrust measures. If the body decides that it does, a subsequent probe could potentially drag on into 2010.

Granted, there’s a lot at stake in Larry Ellison’s plan to use the acquisition of Sun to turn Oracle into a systems vendor, as opposed to a company that just sells software. (Provided the transaction goes through, Oracle will be in a position to hawk Solaris and Linux servers, all running its own database, middleware and application software on the boxes.) And, as the largest tech buy since Hewlett-Packard purchased EDS in May 2008, Oracle’s $7.4bn reach for Sun is clearly not nickel-and-dime M&A.

But the pace of the review by regulators is absolutely glacial. Consider this fact: It took Oracle just two months to fully negotiate its purchase of Sun, according to proxy material. (Sun chairman Scott McNealy spoke with Ellison about a possible deal in late February; the companies announced the transaction on April 20.) More than twice that amount of time has elapsed since Oracle announced the deal – and regulators in Europe are still mulling it over.

Sourcefire: No sale turns into a great deal

Contact: Brenon Daly

With Barracuda Networks looking to gobble up Austrian IT security vendor phion, we thought we’d look back on the other time the rapacious privately held firm eyed a public company. Last summer, Barracuda launched an unsolicited bid for Sourcefire, initially offering $7.50 per share but later raising that to $8.25. The bumped-up bid valued Sourcefire at roughly $215m, but that wasn’t enough for Sourcefire’s board of directors.

We’ve noted in the past that the decision by a company to go it alone can prove very costly to shareholders, at least in the near term. Removing the takeout premium and letting a company trade on its own fundamentals can end up crushing a stock. Recovering that lost ground can be a long and painful process. (Just ask shareholders of Yahoo and Mentor Graphics, who see shares in those companies changing hands these days at just half the level that suitors were willing to pay for them last year.)

However, it’s a completely different story for Sourcefire. It has actually turned out to be one of those rare cases where a target says a bid ‘undervalues’ the business and Wall Street agrees. After telling Barracuda to buzz off, Sourcefire shares got dragged down by the recession and traded below the bid until early April. But since then, the stock has surged to its highest level since the vendor went public in March 2007. Sourcefire shares are currently trading at about $20, or nearly 150% higher than the price Barracuda was willing to pay for them. Looked at another way, Sourcefire’s decision to stay independent has created more than $300m of additional value for its shareholders than the Barracuda bid would have delivered.

VMware: a ‘table-clearing’ bid for the clouds

Contact: Brenon Daly

About a year and a half after Paul Maritz got picked up by EMC, the former Microsoft honcho has struck his signature deal for his new employers. When EMC reached for Pi Corp, which had yet to release a product, we figured the move was basically ‘HR by M&A.’ And that has turned out to be the case, as Maritz took over leadership of EMC’s virtualization subsidiary VMware in July 2008. He stepped into the top spot just as VMware’s once-torrid revenue growth had dwindled to a trickle. Sales at VMware rose 88% in 2007 and 42% in 2008, but are projected to inch up just 2% this year.

To help jumpstart VMware’s growth, Maritz looked to the clouds, pushing through the acquisition of SpringSource earlier this week. At roughly twice as much as VMware has spent on its previous dozen deals, the SpringSource buy is the virtualization kingpin’s largest purchase. It was also, as we understand it, a deal very much driven by Maritz. (Because the purchase topped $100m, it also had to be blessed by VMware’s parent, EMC. This indicates that Maritz enjoys a level of support at the Hopkinton, Massachusetts, HQ that probably wasn’t extended to his predecessor, VMware founder Diane Greene.)

As we have noted, no bankers were involved in negotiations and one source indicated that terms were hammered out directly by Maritz and his counterpart at SpringSource, Rod Johnson, in a scant three-and-a-half-week period. Not that there was much negotiating needed. As we understand it, Maritz approached Johnson with a ‘table-clearing’ offer of $400m. SpringSource didn’t contact any other potential buyers, and in fact, the five-year-old startup only weighed VMware’s bid against the possibility of going public in 2011. (Subscribers to the 451 M&A KnowledgeBase can click here to view our estimates on SpringSource’s revenue, both trailing and projected, as well as its valuation.)

However, the source added that getting to an IPO would have likely required another round of funding for SpringSource. The dilution that would come with another round, combined with the deep uncertainty about the direction of the equity markets, tipped SpringSource toward the trade sale. In the end, that decision – and how Maritz executes on his step into application virtualization – will go a long way toward shaping his legacy at VMware.

Will Fortinet go shopping after going public?

Contact: Brenon Daly, Paul Roberts

Not that Fortinet actually needs more cash to go shopping, but the company will likely substantially fatten its treasury by the end of the year. Officially, the security vendor, which has been generating cash for the past three years, said in its IPO prospectus this week that it plans to raise $100m. However, we suspect the actual amount that it raises could be as much as $200m, a fitting offering for a firm that may well hit the market with a valuation in the neighborhood of $1bn. (Which exchange Fortinet debuts on is still undecided. We can only imagine the fight between the NYSE and the Nasdaq over listing a big-time IPO like Fortinet in such a lean time for new offerings.)

Whatever the amount of money Fortinet ends up raising in the offering, it will have plenty to go shopping. (Not to mention the fact that it will also have freshly minted shares if it wants to do a larger deal.) My colleague Paul Roberts, who heads our security practice, put together a possible shopping list for the company back in April, based on our understanding that Fortinet was a few months away from filing to go public. Roberts discussed a number of possibilities for Fortinet, including network access control and perhaps WAN traffic optimization.

However, he argued that Fortinet would perhaps be best served by making a play for an enterprise security information management (ESIM) provider to make sense of all the information generated by the various offerings. And, as fate would have it, Fortinet already knows one ESIM vendor rather well. Since 2004, the company has been OEMing eIQnetworks’ Network Security Analyzer and reselling it as FortiReporter.

EMC and advisors: All or nothing

Contact: Brenon Daly

After EMC doled out no fewer than nine credits to different banks for working on its acquisition of Data Domain, we were curious how the deal credits would flow around the largest-ever purchase by EMC subsidiary VMware. (The unusually long list of advisers for EMC on Data Domain made us think – of all things – about the quip about compensation under some communist regimes: People pretended to work and the government pretended to pay them.) As it turns out, EMC/VMware swung to the other extreme, with not a single bank working for the virtualization giant in its purchase of SpringSource.

That’s not unusual, since VMware hadn’t really used bankers in the dozen or so acquisitions that it had inked before SpringSource. But those deals were mostly small. In fact, the cumulative spending for all of its earlier buys totals only about half of the $420m in cash and stock that VMware is set to hand over for SpringSource. By our tally, VMware’s pending purchase is the third-largest pickup of a VC-backed tech firm so far this year. Not that the print will show up for any bank. SpringSource didn’t use an adviser, either.

A transatlantic shopping trip for Concur

Contact: Brenon Daly

After being out of the M&A market for two years, Concur Technologies reached across the Atlantic earlier this week for a small Paris-based startup to help expand its business in Europe. Currently, business outside of the US accounts for about 10% of overall revenue at Concur. The company has indicated in the past that it plans to triple the level of international revenue in the coming years. Concur said it will pay up to $40m in cash and equity for Etap-On-Line (including unspecified earnouts), but guided not to expect much from the acquisition right now. (Deutsche Bank Securities advised Concur on the transaction.)

There are a number of reasons for the muted initial expectations for the purchase. First, much of Etap’s revenue will likely get washed out because of differences between French and US accounting standards. (Not that there was likely a lot of revenue to start with.) And even the sales that Etap has booked have come primarily from offering its travel and expense management software through licenses. That means Concur will have to convert the technology to its on-demand platform.

Of course, Concur knows a bit about that process, having transformed itself earlier this decade to an on-demand software provider from the license model. In the words of one banker, the transition was ‘a valley of death’ experience for Concur. But now the company has emerged from the valley and carries the rather alpine valuation of about 6 times fiscal year sales. (Concur currently has an enterprise value of about $1.5bn, compared to the projection of about $250m in revenue in its current fiscal year, which wraps at the end of September.) A number of other software firms quietly (and not so quietly) envy Concur’s makeover – and how it has played on Wall Street. Shares of Concur, which spent much of 2001 at less than $1, closed at nearly $37 on Thursday.

A first for Google: reaching for a public company

Contact: Brenon Daly

In the five years since Google went public, the serial shopper has picked up some 40 other companies. It has bought its way into security, collaboration software, mapping, video and voice, among other areas. And it has inked deals ranging from the low seven figures all the way up to $3.1bn for DoubleClick. But in all of its shopping, Google had never reached for a fellow public company. That changed Wednesday with the search giant’s announced $106m purchase of Amex-listed On2 Technologies. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the year.

Fittingly for a vendor that hangs ‘beta’ tags on products for years, Google didn’t immediately indicate its plans for On2. But we suspect that the video compression technology that On2 developed could well come in handy to lower bandwidth costs and sharpen up the performance of Google’s YouTube property, for instance. (Whatever the strategy, we’re pretty confident that the deal was a pure technology acquisition. Google certainly didn’t snag On2 for its financial performance. Money-burning On2, which has rung up an impressive $183m in accumulated deficit since its founding in 1992, has had negative working capital so far this year.)

As an aside, we would note that there are actually a few ties between Google’s YouTube buy and its pending pickup of On2. Both transactions are the only ones we’re aware of where Google used its own equity to cover the purchase price. (For those On2 shareholders who might be curious, Google shares have handily outperformed the market since the vendor handed over $1.65bn worth of stock to YouTube owners. Google shares are up about 12% since the company announced the YouTube deal in October 2006, compared to a 12% decline in the Nasdaq over that period.) Also, even though Google rarely uses a sell-side adviser, Credit Suisse Securities banked the search giant in both deals. In fact, we understand that the same banker, Credit Suisse’s Storm Duncan, handled the two acquisitions. Duncan worked across the table from Covington Associates’ Tom Cibotti, who advised On2.

Should Cisco dial up eBay’s Skype?

Contact: Thomas Rasmussen

In eBay’s recent report on second-quarter results, the online auction house announced a somewhat disappointing performance in its two core businesses, Payments and Marketplaces, but did see strong results from a surprising source: Skype. The VoIP service increased year-over-year revenue by 25%, while overall sales declined as the legacy Marketplaces revenue sank 14%. Skype revenue hit $170m in the quarter, bringing sales for the division over the past year to $587m. The service is closing in on a half-billion users, finishing June with 481 million users. All in all, that’s a solid performance for a unit largely considered the bastard child of the Silicon Valley auction giant.

However, that certainly isn’t enough to keep Skype inside eBay. The acquisition, which eBay has admitted overpaying for and has written down a huge chunk of the $3.2bn cost, remains largely irrelevant and immaterial to its core e-commerce business. The service has never been integrated into auctions – much less adopted by buyers and sellers – at a level anywhere close to what was planned when eBay picked up Skype four years ago. It stands as the company’s largest-ever purchase and a stark reminder of an ill-conceived deal by the earlier leadership of Meg Whitman. Current CEO John Donahoe has been clear that eBay is returning to its roots, and Skype won’t be a part of that.

So where will Skype go? We see the VoIP vendor on a dual track. It could well get spun off in an IPO. (Provided, of course, that the catastrophe at Vonage hasn’t poisoned the market for VoIP companies.) Or, Skype could look for an acquirer, although we wonder how deep the pool could be for potential buyers that could write a $2bn or so check for it. But we do have one possible interested party: Cisco. Granted, this is a proposal from left field and we’re not suggesting that talks between the companies are going on or anything. However, there is some indication that such a pairing might not be too farfetched. Cisco has increasingly been bulking up its consumer division and its strategy around the media-enabled home is finally starting to come to fruition. Video plays a big part of those plans, and the firm has been talking about expanding its TelePresence offering from the enterprise to the home. An acquisition of Skype with its enormous and growing user base and proven technology on desktops and mobile devices would do just that, and would fit well with its M&A strategy of picking up market adjacencies.

SaaS deals echo in security industry

Contact: Brenon Daly

There are more than a few echoes of Symantec’s purchase of MessageLabs last October in McAfee’s reach last week for MX Logic. In terms of strategy, both acquisitions added millions of end users of on-demand security to the two largest security software companies, which have been slowly looking to increase that side of their business. MessageLabs had attracted more than eight million users at 19,000 customers, while MX Logic brings more than four million users at 30,000 customers.

As far as deal terms go, both buys were done at a similar valuation. Symantec paid 4.8 times trailing sales for MessageLabs, while we estimate McAfee is paying closer to 4 times trailing sales for MX Logic. (If we include the potential $30m earnout in the price, the multiple hits 4.9 times MX Logic’s trailing revenue.) And, we would add that both deals stand as the largest security transactions of their respective years, with the sales of these private software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies eclipsing the prices paid even for public vendors. Symantec shelled out $695m in cash for MessageLabs, topping McAfee’s $497m pickup of Secure Computing as the largest security deal in 2008. So far this year, McAfee’s $140m purchase of MX Logic is the industry’s biggest security transaction, slightly ahead of the contested take-private of Entrust for $124m.

We also suspect that both SaaS acquisitions will pay dividends for Symantec and McAfee. (We have heard from several sources that Symantec is particularly high on its reach across the Atlantic for MessageLabs.) Undoubtedly, these deals will deliver a higher return than the other large SaaS security acquisition, Google’s pickup of Postini. Done two years ago, that buy handed Postini a valuation that’s twice as rich as either MessageLabs or MX Logic. But unlike the moves by Symantec and McAfee, Google didn’t snag Postini for its security offering. Instead, the search giant had the ill-conceived notion that a startup could serve as the platform for its push of Google Apps. Not surprisingly, that idea hasn’t panned out. We certainly haven’t heard much about Postini in the two years since the search giant bought it.

id Software exit signals continued consolidation in gaming

-Contact Thomas Rasmussen

While we have been expecting continued consolidation in the gaming sector for a long time now, we didn’t see this combination coming. Id Software, a staunchly independent, Mesquite, Texas-based shop best known for founder John Carmack and the Doom franchise, sold recently to Rockville, Maryland-based ZeniMax Media. ZeniMax is a relatively small, privately held publisher, having picked up Bethesda Software in 2001. However, the firm has wealthy backers. It raised $300m in 2007 from private equity shop Providence Equity Partners and according to a US Securities and Exchange Commission filing, raised another $105m in debt financing on July 7, which was specifically earmarked for the acquisition of id. Given that ZeniMax undoubtedly wants to retain id’s employees (even giving a seat of the board to id CEO Todd Hollenshead), we suspect ZeniMax also had to tap into its equity to cover the purchase price, which wasn’t revealed.

This deal makes us wonder about the outlook for the remaining independent legacy videogame studios. Specifically, we’re referring to Bellevue, Washington-based Valve Corp and Cary, North Carolina-based Epic Games. Not that we’re suggesting any formal shopping is taking place. But if the id exit shows us anything, it is that in a time when development costs are skyrocketing and financing is harder to come by, it might be wise for studios to join forces with a larger publisher. That’s particularly true as the current economic slump has painfully shown that the videogame industry is not as ‘recession-proof’ as some people had hoped. Shares of Electronic Arts, which serve as a kind of proxy for the entire videogame industry, have been cut in half over the past year, compared to a mere 6% decline in the broader software stock index during the same period.

Videogame-related M&A by the big four, 2006-present

Acquirer Number of acquisitions Total known deal value
Activision Blizzard 10 $5.69bn (includes merger with Vivendi)
Electronic Arts 9 $771m
Microsoft 4 $235m
Sony 6 N/A

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase