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Microsoft has bought
Skype for $8.5 billion, in an all cash deal. The deal closed a few hours ago. The Wall Street Journal confirmed the news after we had first reported it yesterday. The announcement is likely to come out later today or tomorrow morning, according to several reports. Steve Ballmer, chief executive officer of
Microsoft is said to be a big champion of the deal, the largest in the history of the company. Ballmer and
Skype CEO Tony Bates will host a press conference in a few hours.
Skype has been up for sale for some time, thanks to
some very antsy investors. My sources indicated that the both
eBay and Silver Lake Partners have been getting nervous about the delayed initial public offering and have been pushing for a sale of
Skype.
Facebook and
Google were said to be earlier dance partners for
Skype, and
Microsoft was a late entrant and is now close to walking away with the prize.
It won’t surprise me if
Microsoft comes in for major heat on this decision to buy
Skype — and
Microsoft can always botch this purchase, as it often does when it buys a company. The
Skype team is also full of hired guns who are likely to move on to the next opportunity rather than dealing with the famed
Microsoft bureaucracy.
These are the reasons i think
Microsoft had to follow through on this deal:
- Skype gives Microsoft a boost in the enterprise collaboration market, thanks to Skype’s voice, video and sharing capabilities, especially when competing with Cisco and Google.
- It gives Microsoft a working relationship with carriers, many of them looking to partner with Skype as they start to transition to LTE-based networks.
- It would give them a must-have application/service that can help with the adoption of the future versions of Windows Mobile operating system.
- However, the biggest reason for Microsoft to buy Skype is Windows Phone 7 (Mobile OS) and Nokia. The software giant needs a competitive offering to Google Voice and Apple’s emerging communication platform, Facetime.
Guess Who’s The Big Winner
The biggest winner of this deal could actually be
Facebook. The Palo Alto-based social networking giant had little or no chance of buying
Skype. Had it been public, it would have been a different story. With
Microsoft, it gets the best of both worlds — it gets access to
Skype assets (
Microsoft is an investor in
Facebook) and it gets to keep
Skype away from
Google.
Facebook needs
Skype badly. Among other things, it needs to use
Skype’s peer-to-peer network to offer video and voice services to the users of
Facebook Chat. If the company had to use conventional methods and offer voice and video service to its 600 million plus customers, the cost and overhead of operating the infrastructure would be prohibitive.
Facebook can also help
Skype get more customers for its
Skype Out service, and it can have folks use
Facebook Credits to pay for
Skype minutes.
Skype and
Facebook are working on a joint announcement and you can expect it shortly.
Why Did Skype Want To Sell?
Skype had filed for an IPO and was going to do about a billion dollars in revenues and was on its way to becoming profitable. So why sell? Silver Lake and
eBay were both getting impatient and wanted to lock in their profits. Some sources also believe that
Skype’s revenues had stalled.
The company had bet heavily on is video sharing service. The premium version of video calling and sharing was a way for
Skype to increase its average revenue per user and move into the enterprise market. However, given
Skype’s DNA is that of a consumer Internet company, the challenges are not a surprise.
So Who Made What?
- Using the $8.5 billion price as the likely sale price, eBay gets $2.55 billion for its 30 percent stake in Skype. So in the end, eBay did make money on the Skype deal.
- Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, the co-founders with their 14-percent stake, take home about $1.19 billion. Damn, these guys know how to double dip!
- Silver Lake, Andreessen Horowitz and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) own 56 percent of the company and that stake is worth $4.76 billion.
- Andreessen Horowitz had 3 percent of the deal and made $205 million profit on their $50 million initial investment.