Demand for strategic advantage driven by the migration of functionality and value to mobile devices is creating a seller's market for tech start-ups. The frenzy is fueled by excess cash that had been sitting on the sidelines waiting for a signal, any signal, that the elusive and long-awaited exit strategy market might revive.
All that existing or potential IPO money had to go somewhere and the herd logic seems to be that demonstrating mobile acuity is the surest way to build future value. That it has been a while since a tech start-up market this frothy has been seen drives some of the interest, particularly from the investing community which is watching the broader markets move sideways. The Valley's penchant for believing that opportunity windows are closing and that they can not afford to miss whatever the next big thing might be also contributes to the frenzied activity.
Hovering over all of this is the fear that Facebook will prove to be a disappointment. GM's announcement that Facebook advertising has not delivered and that the auto monolith was pulling its account feeds every entrepreneur's deepest insecurities. Even if GM's move was really a payback fit of pique at FB's refusal to give it a better deal, the fact that they would take this step suggests that the ads' impact was not sufficiently important to worry about losing the relationship.
So, everyone who can is trying to cash in while the mood is still mellow and good fellowship reigns. But the very intensity of the activity suggests that there is a fear that this can not and will not last. JL
Shandi Raice reports in the Wall Street Journal:
Silicon Valley start-ups are being energized by some new big spenders in town: Facebook Inc., Groupon Inc. and Zynga Inc.
This year, Facebook and newly public Groupon and Zynga have been snapping up companies at a record pace. In the first three months of the year, the three companies bought at least 21 firms, more than double their combined acquisitions in the same period a year ago, according to Dealogic and people familiar with the deals
While Facebook, Zynga and Groupon haven't been shy about buying companies in the past, they recently have ramped up their acquisitions pace and delivered some of their highest-ever prices for deals. Many of the deals, such as Facebook's purchase of app developer Glancee, are strategic moves into mobile technologies or new markets, instead of like past acquisitions to grab engineering or other talent.
The activity is an outgrowth of the huge sums that the Web companies have raised, or expected to soon raise, through IPOs. Groupon and Zynga went public late last year, snagging $805 million and $1 billion, respectively. When Facebook goes public this week, it is expected to raise up to $13.6 billion.
The rapid-fire acquisition pace and the swelling deal prices are rippling across Silicon Valley, boosting the expectations of many entrepreneurs and investors that lucrative—some would say overly expensive—payouts will continue.
"The effect [of Facebook, Zynga and Groupon buying companies] has been throwing a match into an already very heated venture environment," said Patricia Nakache, a partner at venture-capital firm Trinity Ventures, which invested in travel start-up Uptake that Groupon acquired in February for an undisclosed sum. "It is leading in the short term to an even more frothy investment environment."
Jason Willig, chief executive of San Francisco-based mobile game company Booyah, agrees: "I think there is tremendous opportunity for big exits."
Of all the companies, Facebook has been the fiercest acquirer, buying 12 firms in the first three months of 2012, compared with 12 for all of last year, according to Dealogic.
That puts Facebook in line with one of Silicon Valley's most voracious buyers, Google Inc., GOOG +1.16%which grabbed 13 companies in the first three months of 2012, according to Dealogic.
Since the first quarter, Facebook's deal making has included its biggest-ever purchase: the $1 billion agreement last month for photo-sharing app firm Instagram Inc. At the time, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the acquisition differed from past deals in that Instagram's technology would be incorporated into Facebook's mobile strategy to help the social network beef up its presence in the mobile market.
The Menlo Park, Calif., social network is spending its funds in other ways too, buying $550 million worth of AOL Inc. AOL +3.95%patents from Microsoft Corp.
Meanwhile, Zynga this year also made its biggest-ever purchase: a $180 million acquisition of games maker Omgpop in March. The sum exceeds the $147.2 million that Zynga said it spent in all of 2010 and 2011 to buy 22 companies.
Zynga declined to disclose how many acquisitions it has made this year apart from Omgpop.
Rob Coneybeer, a venture capitalist at Shasta Ventures, has seen firsthand how hungry Zynga has been in acquiring start-ups. He invested in 20-person mobile game company Wild Needle Inc., which he said Zynga scooped up several weeks ago for an undisclosed sum.
Mr. Coneybeer said Zynga executives were "rapid in their decision making and they made an offer that was easy to say yes to." Zynga wooed Wild Needle by selling the start-up on its reach and cross-promotion abilities, he said. Wild Needle employees were "really fired up," he added.
"Zynga can't afford to miss the next big hit," said Mr. Coneybeer. "Games have a shelf life so Zynga by definition will have to be a voracious acquirer."
Groupon, the Chicago-based daily deals site, bought seven companies in the first three months of 2012, compared with seven in all of 2011, according to Dealogic. But unlike Facebook and Zynga, Groupon isn't spending big sums, instead shelling out just $28.4 million on start-ups so far this year, according to a regulatory filing.
Recent deals include San Francisco mobile-payment company Kima Labs, which Groupon bought in February. Terms weren't disclosed.
Groupon said the purpose of the deals has been to snag talent to build up product and technology offerings. That is a shift from last year, when Groupon focused on buying daily-deal sites in international markets to expand its footprint.
Executives at Zynga and Facebook have sought to blunt expectations that their buying streaks will continue. Zynga CEO Mark Pincus said in an earnings call last month that big acquisitions such as Omgpop will be rare.
Facebook's Mr. Zuckerberg, in a blog post announcing the Instagram deal, said, "We don't plan on doing many more of these, if any at all."
But entrepreneurs aren't discouraged. Mike Ouye, CEO of games company Red Robot Labs Inc. in Mountain View, Calif., said Zynga's $180 million for Omgpop is a sign that entrepreneurs building one-hit wonders in the mobile space have the chance to sell that hit for potentially hundreds of millions of dollars. Mr. Ouye adds that he has already had some calls from bigger companies looking to buy, but wouldn't disclose the details of the conversations
Venture capitalist Ms. Nakache said hope springs eternal. "Silicon Valley is a glass half-full optimistic place," she said
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