Top Tech Acquisitions Of 2009
We track a lot of acquisitions on CrunchBase. At the beginning of 2009, acquisitions were at a standstill. But as the economy begrudgingly roused itself from recession, the deal flow started to pick up in the summer, and then rebounded more in the third quarter. There are still a couple weeks left in the year, and a lot can still happen, such as Google buying Yelp for more than $500 million. But with the year wrapping up, we put together an initial list of the top technology acquisitions of 2009.
We’ll update the list if necessary at the end of the year (for instance, we don’t include Yelp in our list because it is not yet final), but it is not likely to change by much. Out of $64 billion worth of technology M&A Crunchbase tracked in 2009, about $54 billion went to the top 30 deals ((see table below). These are only technology deals (Web, software, hardware, mobile) and do not include cleantech or biotech (nor do they include other industries Crunchbase tracks as well).
The largest announced deal, Oracle’s $7.4 billion purchase of Sun Microsystems, is still awaiting regulatory approval. But it set the pattern for bottom-fishing during a financially difficult year. Hewlett-Packard picked up 3Com for $2.7 billion (No. 9) and Intel bought Wind River for $884 million (No. 16), while Microsoft unloaded Razorfish for $530 million (No. 23).
Some of the more significant deals in terms of potential market impact include Amazon’s $1.2 billion shoe-buying spree with Zappos (No. 14), Google’s $750 million acquisition of mobile ad network AdMob (No. 20), and Cisco’s $590 million Pure Digital/Flip Video deal (No. 21). And social gaming saw a lot of activity this year. Two days after Electronic Arts bought Playfish for $400 million (No. 27), competitor Playdom raised money at a $260 million (pre-money) valuation.
Other notable deals which didn’t make the top 30 include American Express paying $300 million for Revolution Money (which would have put it at No. 35), Intuit’s purchases of Mint (No. 45) and PayCycle (No. 46) for $170 million apiece, Google’s $106 million acquisition of On2 Technologies (No. 57), Facebook’s $47.5 million purchase of FriendFeed (No. 86), MySpace’s $20 million deal for iLike (No. 133), and Apple’s $17 million for LaLa (No. 143).
The top 30 tech M&A deals are below:
Company | Acquirer | price |
1. Sun Microsystems | Oracle Corporation | $7,400,000,000 |
2. Affiliated Computer Services | Xerox | $5,750,000,000 |
3. Sanyo | Panasonic | $4,600,000,000 |
4. Marvel Entertainment | The Walt Disney Company | $4,000,000,000 |
5. Perot Systems | Dell | $3,900,000,000 |
6. Tandberg | Cisco | $3,400,000,000 |
7. Unitymedia | Liberty Global | $3,000,000,000 |
8. Starent Networks | Cisco | $2,900,000,000 |
9. 3Com | Hewlett-Packard | $2,700,000,000 |
10. Data Domain | EMC Corporation | $2,100,000,000 |
11. Omniture | Adobe Systems | $1,800,000,000 |
12. Varian | Agilent | $1,500,000,000 |
13. SPSS | IBM | $1,200,000,000 |
14. Zappos | Amazon | $1,200,000,000 |
15. Wind River | Intel | $884,000,000 |
16. iPCS | Sprint Nextel | $831,000,000 |
17. Interwoven | Autonomy | $775,000,000 |
18. Nortel Networks | Ciena | $769,000,000 |
19. AdMob | $750,000,000 | |
20. Pure Digital Technologies | Cisco | $590,000,000 |
21. WildBlue | ViaSat | $568,000,000 |
22. Razorfish | Publicis Groupe | $530,000,000 |
23. Virgin Mobile USA | Sprint Nextel | $483,000,000 |
24. Web Reservations International | Hellman & Friedman | $458,000,000 |
25. LifeSize Communications | Logitech | $405,000,000 |
26. Playfish | Electronic Arts | $400,000,000 |
27. BuscaPe | Naspers | $374,000,000 |
28. SpringSource | VMware | $362,000,000 |
29. BBN Technologies | Raytheon | $350,000,000 |
30. Retail Convergence | GSI Commerce | $350,000,000 |