Cisco acquires Israeli startup Intucell for $475m

Contact: Tejas Venkatesh

Cisco Systems has announced the acquisition of Israeli startup Intucell, paying $475m in cash and retention-based incentives for the startup’s self-optimizing network software. The deal is consistent with Cisco’s recent direction, in which it wants to provide more valuable offerings to service providers in addition to basic networking capability. The networking giant is paying a handsome multiple for the five-year-old target. (Subscribers to The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase can click here to see our official estimate on terms of the transaction.) The exit is a big moneymaker for Bessemer Venture Partners, which provided $6m in funding for almost half of Intucell’s equity.

Intucell’s software helps carriers optimize their networks in real time by analyzing data from cellular grids. Using operational support systems data, it can detect when a cell tower is overloaded and loop in assistance from nearby towers, thereby responding to unpredictable mobile traffic and improving network quality. AT&T was an early Intucell customer.

Cisco’s last three acquisitions have been aimed at service providers. In November, it bought Cariden Technologies for $141m, adding capacity-planning and management tools for IP and optical networks. And in December, Cisco followed up with the purchase of Broadhop for its policy control and service management technology.

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Violin does a bit of portfolio roundout ahead of expected IPO

Contact: Simon Robinson, Brenon Daly

Violin Memory has made a technology-and-talent play, adding GridIron Systems in what’s likely to be the last bit of portfolio roundout before the flash-based storage specialist goes public. The purchase of GridIron is part of Violin’s strategy to maximize its addressable market in the emerging solid-state storage space, and specifically allows it to accelerate the performance of applications residing on existing SAN storage systems at large enterprises and service providers.

Violin didn’t disclose how much it paid for GridIron but we have heard from market sources that it wasn’t much money. As we understand it, GridIron was heading toward a wind-down and Violin is merely picking up some key IP and personnel from the company. The target’s website has only a skeletal list of executives, without a CEO or CFO. A year ago, GridIron indicated that it had some 50 employees, but Violin is expected to take on less than half that number. We’ll have a full report on the transaction in our next Daily 451.

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CyrusOne’s steady rise

Contact: Tejas Venkatesh, Ben Kolada

CyrusOne, the colocation bull that has now changed hands three times since 2007, debuted on the Nasdaq today with a valuation topping $1bn. The fast-growing company was spun off of Cincinnati Bell but is still majority owned (72%) by the regional telco. Shares popped during early trading, continuing the company’s history of creating considerable wealth for each of its owners.

The datacenter company, which is structured as a real estate investment trust, sold 16.5 million shares at $19 per share, higher than its previously guided $16-18 range. The IPO raised a total of $313.5m, though underwriters have an option to sell an additional 2.5 million shares. Shares jumped approximately 10% when they hit the Nasdaq and held the gains through midday trading. CyrusOne currently sports a market cap of about $1.3bn.

CyrusOne operates 24 facilities, primarily in the Ohio and Texas markets. The company offers colocation services aimed at enterprise-class customers requiring highly available facilities, engineered for dense power and reliability. Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Merrill Lynch were joint bookrunners for its IPO.

This is the third time shares of CyrusOne have traded hands since 2007. And in each transaction, its value has steadily climbed, creating considerable wealth for each of its owners.

CyrusOne’s rising valuation

Date Liquidity event Valuation
January 18, 2013 IPO $1.3bn
May 12, 2010 Sale to Cincinnati Bell $525m
July 11, 2007 Sale to ABRY Partners $130m

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase

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Telcos playing a new hosting game

Contact: Ben Kolada

Datacenter operator Digital Realty Trust on Wednesday announced that it paid $80m for a three-property portfolio of datacenters from French telco Bouygues Telecom. The deal could signal yet another robust year in Internet infrastructure M&A, but also shows that telcos are playing different strategic cards in the ongoing hosting game.

Last year set a record in Internet infrastructure M&A deal volume with 110 acquisitions announced, according to The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase. The record is particularly notable as it comes at a time when telcos are weighing alternative options to acquiring hosting properties. With the exception of NTT Communications, which announced three hosting acquisitions last year, telcos have largely been out of the M&A arena.

In fact, as evidenced by Bouygues’ divestiture, telcos are now considering strategies other than buying or owning high-growth hosting businesses. For example, the Digital Realty-Bouygues deal is structured as a sale-leaseback transaction, in which datacenter specialist Digital Realty will own the facilities but Bouygues will lease and operate them. Other telcos, such as Cincinnati Bell, have also decided to pass their hosting facilities on to vendors more versed in the business. Cincinnati Bell is spinning off its CyrusOne hosting unit into a publicly traded entity. CyrusOne will debut on the Nasdaq tomorrow, planning to sell 16.5 million shares $16-18 each.

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Fortinet acquires CDN software startup XDN

Contact: Tejas Venkatesh

Unified threat management vendor Fortinet has acquired four-year-old startup XDN, adding software that is used for building and managing CDNs. The deal helps Fortinet closely tie its security and WAN optimization services with content acceleration software from XDN, thereby providing a distributed, cloud-based approach to adapt effectively to disruptive attack traffic.

Fortinet’s move comes as companies like Akamai have fortified their security lineups with cloud-based Web application firewall and other related services. Fortinet did not disclose terms of the deal. In fact, it was XDN that announced the transaction in a blog post, almost a month after my colleague Jim Davis wrote about the deal. XDN raised about $7m in funding from Storm Ventures and Canaan Partners. For a full report on the acquisition, click here.

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Fiserv acquires Open Solutions and its debt

Contact: Ben Kolada, Tejas Venkatesh

Fiserv has acquired fellow financial software company Open Solutions, adding new clients and bolstering its offerings for credit unions and banks. Fiserv is buying Open Solutions from Carlyle Group and Providence Equity Partners, paying $55m for the target’s equity and assuming $960m in debt. While Open Solutions’ enterprise value (EV) this time around is about 20% less than its price in its 2006 take-private, its equity value is a much smaller fraction of the previous transaction.

In the time since Carlyle Group and Providence Equity took Open Solutions private to Monday’s sale to Fiserv, the company’s debt has ballooned. Open Solutions had roughly $448m in net debt when it announced that it was being taken private. That amounted to about one-third (36%) of its total EV. The company’s debt has nearly doubled in the past six years and now accounts for nearly all (95%) of its EV.

Although Open Solutions’ debt does appear troubling, Fiserv is recognizing some financial benefits from the acquisition. Open Solutions has had a history of losses, which means that tax breaks are available to Fiserv. The net present value of those breaks is $165m, which will ultimately reduce the total cost of the acquisition from $1.01bn to $865m.

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CWC sells stake in Macau unit

Contact: Tejas Venkatesh

Cable & Wireless Communications (CWC) has announced the sale of its 51% stake in Companhia de Telecomunicações de Macau (CTM) to Chinese state-owned company CITIC for $750m in cash. The move is part of the telecom service provider’s continued restructuring and efforts to focus solely on the Americas, and comes one month after it offloaded its Monaco & Islands division.

CTM generated EBITDA of $165m (on $524m in sales) for the year ended March 31, 2012, giving the company an EV/EBITDA valuation of 8.9. Last month, BATELCO bought the Monaco & Islands division of CWC for $680m, or 6.3x trailing EBITDA. CWC’s restructuring has been underway ever since it spun off from its former parent company Cable & Wireless. That spinoff also created Cable & Wireless Worldwide, which was sold to Vodafone in April 2012 for $1.7bn, or 2.7x trailing EBITDA.

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DoJ raises its voice against Bazaarvoice deal

Contact: Brenon Daly

In a highly unusual move, the US Department of Justice (DoJ) filed a lawsuit Thursday afternoon against a company that has already closed an acquisition of a rival firm, alleging the deal is anticompetitive. The DoJ says Bazaarvoice did not report its $152m cash-and-stock purchase of fellow online customer review site PowerReviews to either the DoJ or Federal Trade Commission. The transaction was announced May 24 and closed quickly thereafter, on June 12.

The DoJ, which began investigating after the deal had already closed, didn’t specify exactly what part of the acquisition it would seek to unwind. The release said only that the lawsuit ‘seeks to restore competition’ in the marketplace, and DoJ representatives didn’t respond to requests for clarification.

For its part, Bazaarvoice said it spent six months explaining that there would be ‘robust and ample’ competition in the social commerce marketplace following the Bazaarvoice-PowerReviews combination. The company plans to fight the lawsuit and indicated it expects to be ‘fully vindicated.’

As we noted at the time of the acquisition – which was Bazaarvoice’s first purchase, coming just three months after its IPO – the deal represented a significant bet on being able to move down-market, expanding Bazaarvoice’s voice-of-customer platform to SMBs. At the time of the announcement, PowerReviews had more customers (1,100) than Bazaarvoice (737), but only slightly more than one-tenth the revenue.

Whatever the outcome, Wall Street’s reaction to the lawsuit was immediate. Bazaarvoice shares were unchanged at about $9 each for virtually the entire session Thursday. But when the DoJ announcement came out in the final hour of trading, the stock plummeted 15% to about $7.50. The selling pressure continued on Friday, with the stock dipping to $6.65 – the lowest level for the shares since their debut last February. All in, the DoJ’s lawsuit has trimmed $165m from Bazaarvoice’s market value.

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NetSuite shops for its retail platform

Contact: Brenon Daly

One year after Retail Anywhere released its point-of-sales SuiteApp for NetSuite, the startup has been rolled into the on-demand ERP giant. Terms of the deal, which is NetSuite’s first since mid-2009, weren’t released. However, we suspect the price is probably in the $20-30m range of NetSuite’s two previous acquisitions.

Entirely bootstrapped through its 18 years of incorporation, Retail Anywhere has about 30 employees, with CEO Branden Jenkins taking a general manager role at NetSuite. According to our understanding, Retail Anywhere was generating roughly $5m of sales. For its part, NetSuite will likely report more than $300m of revenue for 2012 when it releases its financial results in early February. The market currently values NetSuite at a stratospheric $5bn.

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Is DISH desperate for spectrum?

Contact: Ben Kolada

Eager to enter the cellular market, DISH Network has announced that it is interested in acquiring Clearwire for $3.30 per share, or about $4.8bn. The deal is actually a ‘take two’ for DISH, and shows the company’s desire (desperation?) to enter the wireless market. However, the market for wireless spectrum is so tight that those with such assets aren’t likely to sell them.

With mobile bandwidth consumption exploding, wireless spectrum is among the most coveted assets by wireless carriers. Over the past two years, there have been a handful of high-priced spectrum acquisitions announced by AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint. The DISH proposal values Clearwire’s spectrum at $2.2bn.

DISH’s desperation to enter the wireless market is apparent in the fact that it previously tried to acquire some of Clearwire’s spectrum assets before Sprint announced that it would buy the remainder of Clearwire it didn’t already own. Obviously, the DISH-Clearwire deal never came to fruition, and the new transaction is likely to fail as well for the same reason.

This time around, spectrum is again at the top of the list of concerns. In responding to the offer, Clearwire issued a press release summarizing a list of Sprint’s objections. First and foremost, Sprint argues that its pending agreement with Clearwire prohibits the company from selling spectrum assets without Sprint’s consent.

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