Kara Swisher

Recent Posts by Kara Swisher

Confirmed: Microsoft Will Announce Acquisition of Skype Tomorrow Morning

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier tonight that Microsoft–in what would be its most aggressive acquisition in the digital space–was zeroing in on buying Skype for $8.5 billion all in with an assumption of the Luxembourg-based company’s debt.

Sources told BoomTown tonight that the deal for the online telephony and video communications giant is actually done and will be announced early tomorrow morning.

The purchase–which has been spearheaded in closely held negotiations by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, with an assist from Business Division CFO Amy Hood and top dealmaker Charles Songhurst–is a bold move for the software giant and its biggest acquisition in more than three decades.

The big price will give Microsoft–which has struggled in its online efforts and has lost billions of dollars for its work–a big brand name on the Web.

With Skype, which has been aggressively expanding, Microsoft will continue to lose money in its Internet efforts. Skype lost $7 million on revenue of $860 million. Operating profits, which Skype preferred to highlight, were $264 million.

And–let us not forget–Skype’s debt is $686 million. Silver lining: That’s slightly less than Microsoft’s Online Services division losses in its most recent quarter!

But, sources said, the concept is bigger than just money, including getting access to Skype’s 663 million registered users.

Skype, which had been headed bumpily toward an IPO until now, will apparently be integrated into Microsoft’s Windows Live and other online communications efforts in both the consumer and enterprise arenas, sources said.

Think Kinect connecting.

Skype has had a big-company owner before–eBay Inc. paid $2.6 billion in cash and stock for it in 2005, as a way for the auction site’s buyers and sellers to communicate.

A 70 percent stake in Skype was sold in 2009 to investors such as Silver Lake Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. It then valued Skype at $2.75 billion.

So, obviously, the deal is a big win for them. In addition, at the time they made their investments, Skype was a huge legal mess with lawsuits flying.

Skype has since gotten cleaned up enough to attract Microsoft.

Other suitors have looked at Skype, including Google, although acquisition interest by Facebook was very much overblown, said several sources.

Interestingly, Microsoft’s new smartphone partner Nokia also held meetings with Skype’s CEO Tony Bates, a former Cisco exec who arrived at the company last fall.

Interest in Skype by Microsoft was first reported by GigaOm’s Om Malik on Sunday.

Tune in at 5 am PT for the official press release, apparently, and lots and lots and lots of analysis of whether Microsoft paid too much for Skype.


comments so far. Add yours.

  • Anonymous

    It’s time to drop Skype on the Mac, it’s about Facetime…

  • http://twitter.com/Thunderclap Michael™

    well that was a surprise. I really didnt want windows live.

  • Anonymous

    I dont get it Microsoft. Why??? esp. at that price tag.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_CID42A2WYIR46LW56LZB432TV4 legalminded

    i would have cared about a couple years ago. But, i’ve been done using skype a while ago. Google voice is better anyway.

  • http://e6group.com CCComboBreaker

    Kara, good point about the Nokia connection. That trifecta of experienced communication companies (MS => WMobile, Nokia = Solid phone hardware, Skype => Great voip) now makes a SERIOUS competitor to Google, iOS and RIM.

  • http://www.AllSanDiegoComputerRepair.com AllSanDiegoComputerRepair

    geez

    WHY would skype sell out to MS?

    yeah, like MS is gonna keep developing for other versions of skype….

    *sigh*

  • http://twitter.com/TSSaloic TSSaloic

    Just like they don’t make versions of Office for non Microsoft platforms, or OneNote for iOS, or Bing for iOS and Android.

  • http://www.AllSanDiegoComputerRepair.com AllSanDiegoComputerRepair

    yeah.. have you ever USED office for mac?

    “meh”

  • http://twitter.com/TSSaloic TSSaloic

    I don’t own a Mac (Also I tend to use either their online Office product, Google Docs, or Libre Office, or some kind of distraction free text editor). Yet they do develop for it, and have a team coming there with experience developing for the Mac. I would worry about the Linux version though.

  • http://blog.glcomputing.com.au/ GLComputing

    It’s a shame, but Facetime isn’t cross-platform and isn’t as good quality …

  • http://madhukarah.tumblr.com madhukarah

    Ugh…. Bad move $MS :(

  • Anonymous

    Have you used the current Skype UI on Windows AND OS X? It is below “meh.” It’s crap. I hope MS makes it better.

  • Anonymous

    Nice, that looks like it might jsut work! Wow.
    http://www.totally-anon.at.tc

  • Anonymous

    Microsoft wins bidding war against itself, Skype to be rebranded Windows FaceTalk (with Skype).

  • http://josedmorales.net Josè Daniel

    Whoa!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Tony-Baker/546626146 Tony Baker

    Wow, you don’t even know how to use a decade’s old insult like M$ properly… unless you’re suggesting that SMS text messages are expensive and a bad move?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=507827261 Homer Murray Jr.

    to be on top over everyone.

  • http://www.facebook.com/rj.linehan Rory Linehan

    Time to drop Skype. M$ is gay. I will now be switching to Google voice

  • Anonymous

    I agree about the cross-platform regarding Facetime. Apple said they were going to open source last year but we’re still waiting…

    I disagree that the quality is better. Skype calls are more stable because Skype is better at adjusting quality based on available bandwidth.

  • Anonymous

    You were never going to use it anyway, because you’re a Microsoft hating twat.

    “M$ is gay.”

    What are you? 12! Google is a great ad company. But that’s all they are. They are a shit software company. In fact, they aren’t even that.

  • http://www.facebook.com/BradleyAMartin Bradley A Martin

    Remarkable timing for this announcement, the first day of Google I/O. That’s a pretty big Microsoft thumb in the eye of Google.

  • http://mikaforsel.livejournal.com/ TF

    Next headline: Microsoft Buys Google

  • http://blog.glcomputing.com.au/ GLComputing

    Until Facetime is available on Blackberry, Android, Windows Phone 7 and Windows itself, it’s not a real competitor to Skype. Not to mention that it need to be able to work as just voice for users who don’t have a camera (or don’t wish to use it)

    Skype also has the IM functionality and ability to see if someone is available before calling them

  • Anonymous

    This acquisition would be like you being a teen and your parent trying to do something you think is cool only for teens. You will laugh to yourself then stop doing the cool thing immediately. Skype users will most likey stop using their VoIP software in favor of more trendy alternatives.

  • Winski

    Well..there goes Skype… Another perfectly good company bites the dust…. Nokia, now Skype..who’s next, the Mississippi River?? Bomber wouldn’t know the difference…

  • http://twitter.com/emappus11 Elliott Mappus

    I don’t think Microsoft has the money to buy Google…

  • http://www.facebook.com/leoplan2 Alvaro Osvaldo López-García

    and it seems you are a MS shill, and you don’t understand Google bussiness

  • http://nigeltufnel.myopenid.com/ Nigel Tufnel

    That’s really the best use of $7B? Wow. MS is so lost.

  • http://nigeltufnel.myopenid.com/ Nigel Tufnel


    WHY would skype sell out to MS?”

    Because they offered probably 2-4 times what it was worth? How likely is it that they’d ever see that kind of return on their investment, or find another sucker that desperate? How many companies even have that kind of cash to spend?

  • http://nitinkumarjain.in NitiN Kumar Jain

    now this is a news … skype may come over its recent time time glitches now …

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Jbondsr-Offori/100001918338886 Jbondsr Offori

    Microsoft is moving towards a complete solution.

    Why go somewhere else, when you can go to MS and get:
    Operating Systems, Office Suite, Sharepoint, Mail, Backup, AntiVirus (not so good here), Remote Services, Virtual Systems (HyperV), Web Hosting, Cloud Services, Cell services (WP7/Nokia), and now VoIP (via Skype with video conferencing).

    Plus, they’ve made a lot of headway in the game industry with the Xbox live brand, and making moves with xbox live and windows game marketplace.

    All they need to do is get a partnership with netflix and facebook (while usurping youtube) then the world will be controlled by them.

  • http://www.tptbh.com/ NO-OK.com TheOn.it MsnOn.it

    buy Skype for $8.5 billion is surely very much better than buy Yahoo for $45 billion as Microsoft attempted to do a couple of years ago

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1196679514 Branimir Parashkevov

    I just hope that MS won’t “over-connect” Skype with Live…Else, a really good deal for the Blue S guys with good perspective if taken seriously by Ballmer & Co. :D

  • http://profile.typepad.com/6p0120a5509de8970c Mikko

    Skype for linux will be discontinued and microsoft will change something so that calls don’t work with older skype versions and skype for mac will be crippled and light years after the windows version

  • http://www.facebook.com/urban.spaceman Ian Bradley

    No no no no no no no no no! This is terrible news!

  • http://www.BradReese.Com Brad Reese

    Joltid transaction a hangman’s noose around Skype’s neck?

    On November 6, 2009 Skype ballyhooed:

    “eBay Inc. (NASDAQ: EBAY) today announced that the investor group led by Silver Lake, which had previously entered into a definitive agreement to acquire a majority stake in Skype from the company, has reached a settlement agreement with Joltid Limited and Joost N.V. that gives Skype ownership over all software previously licensed from Joltid and ends all litigation currently pending against the investor group and eBay at the closing of the acquisition.”

    However revealingly, on August 9, 2010 Skype filed a Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (page 195) which described in more detail the above “settlement agreement” with Joltid (which in my personal opinion is now a hangman’s noose around Skype’s neck):

    The Joltid Transaction

    On November 1, 2009, prior to the completion of the Skype Acquisition, we entered into a transaction with Joltid Limited (“Joltid”) which comprised three components: we and eBay reached a settlement of outstanding litigation with Joltid, we acquired intellectual property rights to the “Global Index” technology from Joltid and Joltid made an $80 million equity investment in us. We collectively refer to these matters as the “Joltid Transaction.” The Joltid Transaction centered on Skype’s acquisition of intellectual property rights in the Global Index software technology that we had originally licensed from Joltid in connection with the founding of Skype. Global Index is software that, among other functionality, facilitates communication in a peer-to-peer network of Skype users. We describe the main terms of the Joltid Transaction below:

    Settlement and non-assertion. Skype and Joltid and all other related parties settled all outstanding litigation and claims between them, and each party agreed not to assert any claims against the other party and its customers and distributors under any patents with an application date prior to the fifth anniversary of the Skype Acquisition, which closed on November 19, 2009.

    Equity Consideration. Joltid received an approximate 10% share in the share capital of the Company (valued at the time at $224.0 million) and a cash payment of $85.0 million. In addition, Joltid received warrants to purchase an additional 98,680 Skype Global shares, equivalent to a 1% equity stake at such time, exercisable until the earlier of November 19, 2019 or the closing of a reorganization event, as defined in the warrant agreement. The warrant has since been transferred to SEP Investments Pty Limited, an entity unaffiliated with Joltid; for more information on the terms of the warrant, see “Capitalization-Warrants.”

    Joltid Investment. Joltid also made an investment in us by investing $80.0 million in cash for an additional approximate 3.4% of our ordinary shares.

    Acquisition of Intellectual Property Rights. We acquired from Joltid (a) ownership of Joltid’s intellectual property rights in the Global Index software provided to Skype, subject to the license-back to Joltid of certain rights described in the next bullet point, and (b) co-ownership with Joltid of patents covering database systems that are distributed across multiple computers for enhanced data storage and retrieval, which is a technology that we use in connection with the peer-to-peer architecture enabled by our software. We have the exclusive right to use and enforce these patents in the areas of (i) telephony and/or video communications between end users, and (ii) file transfer functionality, instant messaging and e-mail, when used as an ancillary service or application to telephony and/or video communications between end users, in each case, regardless of the form or method of communication or access thereto. We refer to these areas as the “Skype Exclusive Field.”

    License-back to Joltid. We granted to Joltid a non-exclusive, perpetual, royalty-free license to use, distribute, sublicense and otherwise exploit, solely outside the Skype Exclusive Field, the Global Index software that we acquired from Joltid. We retained our rights to use the Global Index software ourselves in any field of use, including outside of the Skype Exclusive Field. In addition, we remain free to license others to use the Global Index software on or in connection with (a) our platform, or publicly available products and services, or (b) the content, products or services of any third party that are enabled by or available through our platform and client or publicly available products and services. However, apart from these uses, we agreed not to license others to use the Global Index software outside of the Skype Exclusive Field.

    Other commitments. In addition, we made payments or commitments to pay or invest an additional $32.3 million to or in affiliated parties of Joltid and to reimburse $20.0 million to cover expenses incurred by Joltid. The aggregate settlement of $378.4 million resulted in a net charge of $343.8 million recorded in the Predecessor statement of operations for 2009 and reflects the estimated fair value of the equity relinquished in the settlement, less the estimated fair value of intellectual property received from Joltid.

    In connection with the Joltid Transaction, we also entered into a number of related agreements:

    Agreements with Rdio, Inc. We invested $6.0 million in Rdio, Inc a new social music service founded by Janus Friis with Niklas Zennstrom, Skype’s founders, who are indirect beneficial owners, among others, of Rdio, Inc., pursuant to a convertible note instrument. We have agreed that for a period extending until November 19, 2011, we will not provide, other than with Rdio, or engage others to provide, services for the broadcast of professionally-produced music that is accessible by computer, mobile device, television set-top box, or other device that is capable of accessing the Internet. These restrictions are subject to certain exceptions that allow us to engage in our communications business in the ordinary course. We are free to publish a generally available application programming interface enabling third parties to provide, embed or link our products, services, software clients, or platform through third party websites, software clients, product or services. We are also able to publish a generally available application programming interface enabling third parties to provide, embed, link or otherwise expose third party software, clients, products or services on our products, services, software clients, website or platform.

    Agreement with Baaima N.V. (formerly Joost N.V.) We entered into an agreement with Joltid and Joost N.V., an affiliate of Joltid, which is now called Baaima, N.V. Skype’s founders, Janus Friis and Niklas Zennstrom, are indirect beneficial owners, among others, of part of Baaima. We agreed that, until May 19, 2012, we would use commercially reasonable efforts to prominently promote a new video service under development by Baaima, on our website, in marketing e-mails and through in-client dynamic content, provided the video service was of sufficient quality. In return, we are entitled to receive 50% of the adjusted gross margin resulting from the revenue generated by Baaima from the video service on our platform. We have agreed that, until May 19, 2012, we will not provide, or engage others to provide, services for the broadcast of professionally-produced cable television, network television, feature films and similar content, in each case, that is accessible by computer, mobile device, television set-top box or other device that is capable of accessing the Internet. These restrictions are subject to certain exceptions to enable us to engage in our voice communications business in the ordinary course. In particular, we are free to publish a generally available application programming interface enabling third parties to provide, embed or link our products, services, software clients, or platform through third party websites, software clients, product or services. We are also free to publish a generally available application programming interface enabling third parties to provide, embed, link or otherwise expose third party software, clients, products or services on our products, services, software clients, website or platform.

    Euroskoon Patent License and Purchase Agreement. We entered into an agreement with Euroskoon, LLC pursuant to which Euroskoon granted us a non-exclusive, irrevocable license to a number of patents. These patents cover programming for peer-to-peer technology. Under the terms of the agreement, we may sublicense these patents to (a) Joltid, (b) end users and third parties in connection with the software based products and services that we and, to the extent they interface with our products and services, our licensees make commercially available and (c) our affiliates. In return, we agreed to make an initial payment of $2.5 million and an annual royalty payment of $1.5 million. Between September 1, 2010 and September 30, 2010, we have the option to purchase the licensed patents for $9.0 million. If we do not exercise this option, Euroskoon has the option between April 1, 2011 and April 30, 2011 to obligate us to purchase the licensed patents for $7.5 million. In connection with our agreement with Euroskoon, we entered into a sublicense agreement with Joltid whereby we granted to Joltid a non-exclusive, perpetual, royalty-free sublicense to the Euroskoon patents described above. Under the terms of the sublicense agreement, Joltid may sublicense these patents to (a) end users and (b) third parties to use, distribute, sublicense and otherwise exploit, in both cases only in connection with the software-based products and services that Joltid and, to the extent they interface with Joltid’s products and services, Joltid’s licensees make commercially available for use by or on behalf of Joltid.

    Investment in Atomico. We also agreed to invest $10.0 million in Atomico Ventures II, LLP (which we refer to as Atomico), an Internet, technology and telecommunication venture capital fund. Skype’s founder, Niklas Zennstrom, is a general partner of Atomico, and with Janus Friis, among the most substantial investors in Atomico the most substantial investors in Atomico.

    Sincerely,

    Brad Reese

  • http://www.limohiredirectory.co.uk/ Limo Hire

    Wow, great, I wish that also captured Google.

  • http://profiles.google.com/amrithaa2011 amrithaa 2011

    hi, if the ms accuire the skype even after free for all…!!! hah haha

    Visit US: http://www.amrithaa.com

  • http://www.youtube.com/dfmediainc Triny D

    That’s a lot of money, but video conferencing is the next killer app..they will probably try to flip it into a social network

  • http://www.about.me/liamdaly Liam

    I wonder if this means Facebook will get access to Skype considering Microsoft has a partnership with them

  • Anonymous

    Microsoft does not like cross-platform software.

    When Microsoft makes “cross platform” software, it is either non-existent on other platforms, or it is hobbled in some way.

    This is bad news for Skype users on Mac or Linux. Microsoft is likely to cut them adrift, or not update them as quickly as the Windows versions.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_CUTQWU5DFFGR4QZCV3ABCUZ7IU Dathu

    I don’t think so Microsoft overpaid Skyup.This deal boost the Microsoft revenue in the Internet business and for long term prospective it can useful for the company nearest competitor like Google and Apple.this is really good move by the company management.

  • http://www.catheycommunications.com/blog Robert.R.Cathey

    Will be interesting to see how MSFT + Skype play the public relations on this. The messaging likely will focus on synergies with Bing and online gaming, but I’ll be interested to see if there are any plans to migrate the core compute and storage elements of Skype to Azure.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=519030053 Tyler Woodward

    Oh no… This means they are going to merge it with Windows Live and a bunch of other bullshit.

  • Anonymous

    A serious POTENTIAL competitor.

    Microsoft still has to execute and create a desirable product that people want to buy. That is extremely hard for them. They still make most of their money off their 1980′s products.

  • Anonymous

    Simple: they got paid at least 4x what they are worth.

  • Anonymous

    It will give Google I/O attendees something to laugh at over lunch, after they get finished laughing about how Google took all of Microsoft’s mobile market share.

  • http://www.facebook.com/retroblu Zeek Weeks

    just wanted to point out that you agreed w/ GLComputing in regards to Facetime not be of good quality in your disagreement statement. :)

  • Anonymous

    They really should. It’s a waste of energy for them both to copy Apple all the time when only one crappy generic clone is needed.

  • Anonymous

    Yeah, I won’t use a Microsoft product no matter what. They are untrustworthy and incompetent and it’s just not worth it.

Latest Video

View all videos »

Search »

While it’s tempting to see the Huffington Post’s Pulitzer as a “big win for new media,” or something like that, the real story is that these organizations — the Huffington Post, the New York Times, the Washington Post — are becoming more like each other. Old media and new media are increasingly antiquated terms.

— Journalism professor Jay Rosen to HuffPo media writer Michael Calderone (via GigaOM)