On a Friday morning (September 19, 2014), when
China’s biggest online commerce company, Alibaba, filed for, what turned out to
be a blockbuster IPO at the New York Stock Exchange, a certain technology
company was yelling “Yahoo! Yahoo!” in jubilation. This chant, coincidentally,
was its name too.
Yes, Yahoo had sold about 122 million shares of
Alibaba in the IPO, and had coolly netted the proceeds, which amounted to $5.1
billion after taxes. And it continues to maintain a 16.3% stake in Alibaba,
which is valued in the region of $37.7 billion. In short, the bet Yahoo made
when it bought a 40% stake in Alibaba for $1 billion has paid off big, so big
that it has shifted the focus from the struggles of its core business to its
acquisition strategy in general.
Yahoo has acquired 41 companies in the last two
years, according to a recent article in Business Insider. And CEO Marissa Meyer
and M&A & HR Chief Jacqueline Reses have no plans of slowing down. Last
month alone, it acquired advertising start up Luminate, and document handling
start up BookPad. We are barely a week into October, and Yahoo has already
announced its acquisition of MessageMe, a mobile messaging service that
competes with Whatsapp Inc. And according to a recent article in Wall Street
Journal, Yahoo is planning to re-invest some of the proceeds from Alibaba into
Snapchat, which is valued at $10 billion. The figure below shows the number of
acquisitions per year by Yahoo.
| Source: CB Insights |
Some would say Yahoo’s shopping spree has been
nothing short of tactical brilliance. And they would happily point their
fingers at Alibaba to make their case. Furthermore, post Alibaba’s blockbuster
IPO, I would expect Yahoo to adopt an even more aggressive acquisition
strategy.
However, a word of caution: there is a possibility
that Yahoo’s shopping spree could lead to purchase of overvalued companies,
which could prove hurtful to the company in the long run. There are two
theories, which could explain this possibility: the Hubris Theory and the
Desperation Theory.
The Hubris theory was put forward by Richard Roll in
1986, and it states that hubris on the part of individual decision makers in
bidding firms can explain why they overpay for the acquisition. The windfall
from Alibaba’s IPO could make Yahoo a victim of hubris, and it could end up
overvaluing targets and paying lofty premiums for them, a scenario that would
hurt its investors.
The Desperation theory can provide a clearer
explanation for the possibility that Yahoo might end up overpaying for future
acquisitions. The desperation theory was put forward by Ji-Yub Kim, Jerayr
Haleblian and Sydney Finkelstein in 2011. According to this theory, there are
two drivers of overpayment for acquisitions: low organic growth and high
relative acquisition dependence. According to a recent article by Jeremy
Quittner in Inc., Yahoo’s market capitalisation stands at almost $41 billion,
and its 16% stake in Alibaba is valued at $37 billion. Remove Alibaba, and we
have a company whose valuation is only $4 billion, which places Yahoo in the
same league as AOL (market cap: $3.5 billion) and online daily deals retailer
Zulily (market cap: $4.5 billion). No surprise then that hedge fund activist
Starboard Value LP has urged Yahoo to merge with AOL. Its struggling core
business could force Yahoo to continue to depend on acquisitions for growth.
And this could result in venture capitalists, hedge fund activists, and other
target company shareholders demanding lofty premiums, which a “desperate” Yahoo
would have to end up paying.
At present, Yahoo can afford to sit back and
continue its shopping spree since it has the cash and a safety cushion in its
stake in Alibaba. However, in the long run, whether its shopping spree
eventually leads to overpaid acquisitions and a worrisome scenario in general
remains to be seen.
A different view enlightening on the games internet companies play. Interesting ! Keep going !
ReplyDeleteutham