Apple close to buying Beats for $3.2
billion: source
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[May 09, 2014] By
Nadia Damouni, Christina Farr and Nicola Leske
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)
— Apple Inc is close to paying a record $3.2 billion for
Beats Electronics, two people with knowledge of the matter said, an
expensive foray into music streaming and headphone gear that would
mark a departure for the usually cash-conservative iPhone maker.
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Both companies are hashing out details and the envisioned deal could
still fall through, one person told Reuters on condition of
anonymity because the discussions were private.
A second source familiar with the matter told Reuters that Apple was
in the market for a subscription-based music service to complement
its "iRadio" ad-based offering, launched in 2013 as part of an
attempt to jump into a music-streaming arena then split between a
handful of startups such as Pandora Inc.
Founded by rapper Dr. Dre and legendary music producer Jimmy Iovine,
Beats Electronics is best known for its "Beats by Dr Dre" line of
trendy headphones that vie with the likes of Skullcandy Inc,
Sennheiser Electronic and Bose Corp. This year, it launched a music
service that has won plaudits for its slick design and human music
curation, versus the computer-algorithms that determine playlists
for most of its rivals.
But analysts on Thursday questioned whether Beats, valued at just $1
billion during its last funding round in September, was worth that
price. Apple had more than $130 billion in cash as of the end of
March, but the vast majority of that is parked abroad and investors
have called on the company to return more cash in the form of
dividends and buybacks.
Apple-watchers have speculated that the company that upended the
music industry - and today is the single largest seller of tunes -
was contemplating a Spotify-like on-demand music service to go with
iRadio service and iTunes.
"This is really puzzling," said Forrester analyst James McQuivey,
who said there was huge overlap between the two companies' customer
base. "You buy companies today to get technologies that no one else
… or customers that no one has."
"They must have something hidden … under the hood," he said.
In two of the largest deals this year, Facebook paid $19 billion for
WhatsApp and its half-billion users, and it paid $2 billion for
Oculus VR and its cutting-edge virtual reality headset.
Apple declined to comment on the report. Beats Electronics did not
respond to requests for comment on the news, which was reported
first by the Financial Times.
UNDER PRESSURE?
Apple has not made a billion-dollar acquisition in at least a
decade. The company prefers to develop and design its products
in-house, though it has tended to pay several hundred million
dollars for small but important bits of technology to propel its
core consumer electronics business, such as the acquisition of PA
Semi in 2008 that led to the processor now found in all iPhones.
The company has been under pressure to try to revitalize growth as
iPhone sales slow in a rapidly maturing market. Critics have also
accused the company of slowly "losing its cool" and innovative edge
to new and upcoming technology companies, and missing the
music-streaming bandwagon.
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Technology giants Google and Amazon began jockeying for position in
music last year, looking at ways to make streaming profitable and to
develop a service seen as crucial to retaining users in an
increasingly mobile environment. For Google and Apple especially,
the endeavor was critical to ensure users remain loyal to their
mobile products.
They realized they had to stake out a place or risk ceding control
of one of the largest components of mobile device usage. Analysts
estimate roughly half of smartphone users listen to music on their
device, making it the fourth most popular media-related activity
after social networking, games and news.
Apple launched its own streaming music service last year, hoping to
jump into the fast-expanding arena as growth of its iTunes service
falters.
Apple's Chief Executive Tim Cooks met with Iovine, the Beats CEO,
last year on a potential partnership involving Beats's planned
music-streaming service, Reuters reported in March, citing sources.
(http://r.reuters.com/ter29v)
Dre - who guided the careers of a string of rap artists such as
Eminem and 50 Cent - compared his company with Apple in 2011.
"We're trying to eventually be second to Apple. And I don't think
that's a bad position," Dre told The Fader music website.(http://r.reuters.com/cur29v)
Beats Electronics received a $500 million investment from Carlyle
Group in September that valued the company at over $1 billion. It
also bought back in September a 24.84 percent stake held by Taiwan
smartphone maker HTC Corp, which once held as much as 50.1 percent
of the company.
(Corrects ninth paragraph to show that Facebook paid $19 billion for
WhatsApp)
(Reporting by Sweta Singh and Edwin Chan; Additional reporting by
Sweta Singh in Bangalore; Editing by Rodney Joyce and Ken Wills)
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