Search News Desk
Microsoft's Chase After Google Reverberates
The $6 Billion Aquanta Acquisition, When Broken Down, Still Astounds
May. 30, 2007 07:45 PM
Microsoft, supposedly thwarted in
previous bids for other Google-adjusting properties, is paying $6
billion cash for aQuantive, a 10-year-old publicly held Internet
ad company that could be said to have been relatively unknown when Microsoft announced that it was paying an outlandish 85%
premium to buy it to compete against Google.
Six billion is more money than
Microsoft ever paid for anything. It said the price was bid up by
competition, but provided no color. It claimed that "it's
exactly the right company to buy, and hence we're willing to
pay." Microsoft has $28 billion in the bank. Microsoft is outspending Google,
which said it would pay $3.1 billion for DoubleClick last month
(unless it's stopped by Microsoft-inspired regulators).
Microsoft also supposedly bid for
DoubleClick and was reportedly willing to pay a billion dollars
for 24/7, which London ad agency WPP took out last week for $649
million. Yahoo is buying Right Media for $680 million and is
rumored to be interested in the British social networking site
Bebo, a miniature MySpace.
The pundits haven't given up on the
idea that Microsoft could still buy Yahoo. Goldman Sachs, for one,
thinks the aQuantive deal increases the odds of such a thing
happening because Yahoo is the missing piece of the puzzle that
Microsoft needs to go up against Google. The alternative, they
say, would mean picking up a cluster of smaller companies - and if
you listen to Microsoft right now that's what'll happen.
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