Hi guys, see bold Andy Kessler: Technology's Turkey Tie-Ups
By Andy Kessler Special to TheStreet.com 11/24/98 10:10 AM ET
In the spirit of the AOL (AOL:NYSE)-Netscape (NSCP:Nasdaq) merger, and the flame it has lit under Internet stocks (like they really needed a flame), I ask you: Are technology mergers a recipe for a successful company and satiated investors, or an undercooked idea headed for an Alka Seltzer moment? (Can you tell I am looking forward to Thanksgiving?)
Despite spending 10-plus years working for investment banking firms and rooting for mergers and the fat fees associated with them, I think most mergers in the technology industry are turkeys. There may be a promise of tasty returns, but in reality mergers are just big, dumb, overstuffed, flightless fowl.
Fortunately, it won't be hard to prove this to you. If I had a dime for every merger announcement that falsely promised "synergy," I'd have enough dimes to finally afford one share of Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq). I am going to get in trouble for describing them, but examples of bad mergers litter the landscape.
We can go all the way back to the Burroughs-Sperry merger that gave us Unisys (UIS:NYSE), way back in 1987. The other outfit IBM (IBM:NYSE) laid waste to is more interesting: NCR (NCR:NYSE). It actually fought the AT&T (T:NYSE) merger, and it would have done both companies a big favor if the protests had led to a cancellation of the deal. But no such luck -- AT&T was intent on getting into the non-PC computer business in a big way just as most computer companies were trying to figure out how to get out of it. That bad episode ended only when NCR was recently spun out.
When National Semiconductor (NSM:NYSE) wanted to reposition itself as a system-on-a-chip company, it bought Intel (INTC:Nasdaq) microprocessor clone-maker Cyrix, maker of the PC on a single chip. Good theory. But until National moved the line over to its own chip plants, Cyrix depended on IBM for a foundry. Little wonder, then, that Cyrix had a hard time getting parts from IBM, since Cyrix's biggest customer was Compaq (CPQ:NYSE), which was competing with IBM at the low end of the PC business. Ooops, National is still reeling from the purchase.
The network-equipment business is a huge growth market, but the consolidation craze has wrecked more great companies than competition ever could.
Bay Networks, which combined Synoptics and Wellfleet, had huge problems integrating the Boston 128 and Silicon Valley cultures, product lines and time zones. But obviously, West Coast-based Ascend (ASND:Nasdaq) wasn't paying attention, since it bought East Coast Cascade just as Cascade's ATM switching business started deteriorating, dragging down the combined company.
Now, the word on the Street has it that Bay has lost MCI WorldCom's (WCOM:Nasdaq) huge frame-relay equipment business to Ascend/Cascade, thanks in part to Bay's having been distracted by its merger with Northern Telecom (NT:NYSE). And speaking of synergy, WorldCom itself has seen an exodus of top marketing brains from MCI in another financial merger that has yet to prove itself. What a tangled mess.
Or take 3Com (COMS:Nasdaq), which wanted to be a consumer player but should have stuck with buying names of football stadiums, because it got the proverbial candlestick when it bought U.S. Robotics. The combined pair have been stuck with an overstuffed consumer channel ever since, just when they should be flying high.
Hardware mergers are not the only turkeys: The software industry has plenty to pluck from, too. Most are based on an attempt to compete with mighty Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq). (I'll get to their turkeys in a future column.)
Novell (NOVL:Nasdaq) tried to merge with Lotus, but both stocks dropped 20% the day of the announcement, and they got the message and called it off. Instead, Novell bought Word Perfect and Borland's Quattro Pro spreadsheet to create a suite to take on Office. It didn't turn out so sweet and the pieces are now scattered about. After Microsoft bought Softimage to get into the video effects business, Silicon Graphics (SGI:NYSE) bought the next two players, Alias and Wavefront. These will probably be sold off by new SGI management, just as Microsoft dumped Softimage on Avid (AVID:Nasdaq).
To be fair, not all mergers are awful. IBM seems to be making hay with the Lotus and Tivoli purchases, but it is hard to tell inside of what has become a mammoth hardware/software/service company. The deal may be worth it for the great TV commercials alone.
To me, there are two types of mergers that make sense.
1.Really smart guys just buy the customers and recurring maintenance revenue of a failed company and then detonate a neutron bomb. Computer Associates (CA:NYSE) is famous for this and doesn't kid itself about synergy. Network Associates (NTWK:Nasdaq) is another company that consciously changed its name from McAfee to ape Computer Associates in both name and business model.
2.The other successful approach is taken by firms that realized that they were paying not for ongoing businesses, but for talent, technology and maybe products, in that order. Cisco (CSCO:Nasdaq) is famous for this. Outside of Crescendo's ethernet switches, not too many of its mergers have subsequently turned into major successful product lines. Unfortunately, this probably includes Stratacom, a somewhat dwindling asset that cost Cisco $4 billion. For the most part, Cisco buys engineering teams specializing in technology that Cisco needs in the future. Intel's acquisitions, such as graphics controllers and remote access, are far enough away from microprocessors to play a supporting role.
As to Compaq-DEC, we'll see. And to AT&T-TCI (TCOMA:Nasdaq), good luck. If you can think of a major acquisition that changed an acquirer for the better on a long-term basis, let me know. Editor-in-Chief Dave Kansas will send a TSC hat (won't you Dave?) to the best merger pointer. If none are best (in my opinion), I get the hat. I promise to be fair. |