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| Tech Merger Meter 2006 | ||||||
| Friday, December 29, 2006 | ||||||
| OVERVIEW | ||||||
![]() IT WAS ANOTHER RECORD YEAR for spending on technology mergers and acquisitions as both private equity firms and corporations dug into their deep pockets. The value of announced tech and telecom deals, excluding debt, increased 4.9% to $611.89 billion in 2006 even though the number of transactions declined 2.9% to 5,526, according to Dealogic. The increase was most pronounced at the highest levels: The biggest deals got even larger. This inflation was driven largely by favorable credit markets and mounting cash holdings at companies. This allowed "many potential buyers to stay competitive in auctions that they perhaps wouldn't have contested in years past, driving up prices," says Brenon Daly, an analyst at research firm 451 Group. For the second year in a row, AT&T was behind one of the biggest deals. After swallowing SBC in 2005, AT&T offered to pay $66.67 billion for BellSouth. Ma Bell is still awaiting regulatory approval, but sibling Lucent was sold for $13.44 billion to France's Alcatel. Buyout firms continued to hunt big tech targets in 2006. A year after SunGard agreed to an $11 billion buyout, Freescale Semiconductor reached a $17.6 billion deal with a Blackstone-led group. Meanwhile, corporate buyers remained active, with H-P buying Mercury Interactive and Google snapping up YouTube. In this graphic, you can see some of the biggest tech deals of 2006 and what our panel of bankers and M&A advisers expects for 2007. Research: Marcelo Prince BIG DEALS Here are some technology deals that made headlines in 2006.
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OUTLOOK
http://online.wsj.com/page/2_1267.html? Copyright © 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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Marlin & Associates Founded in 2002, Marlin & Associates is a boutique investment banking and strategic consulting firm focused on providing highly strategic and specialized, transaction-related services to U.S. and international middle-market firms engaged in technology, information, on-line media and business-services. The firm is based in New York City with a Washington, DC office. |