Home | About | Recent Issue | Archives | Events | Jobs | Subscribe | ContactBookmark The Sterling Report


   

Will the enterprise market spend significant IT budget on Windows Vista in 2007?

Yes

No


Software M&A - A Glimpse into the First Quarter
continued... page 2


Pitney Bowes (NYSE: PBI) acquires Group 1 Software (Nasdaq: GSOF)
Category: Customer Relationship Management
Purchase Price: $263,410,000EV
Seller Revenue: $109,970,000
Revenue Multiple: 2.4x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Pitney Bowes, a vendor of mailroom equipment and mailing solutions, grows its document management business by acquiring Group 1 Software, a developer of direct mail, direct marketing and customer communications software. The purchase price, a 40% premium over Group 1’s closing stock price before the deal was announced, is the largest of Pitney Bowes 35 acquisitions (totaling $1.3 billion) since 2001. As a result, Standard & Poor’s Rating Services has placed Pitney Bowes on “Credit watch with negative implications”, citing concerns about the company’s leverage profile, in large part due to its acquisition strategy. Group 1 has been struggling, with revenue decreasing 4.2% and earnings decreasing 50.3% in its last fiscal year. Investors responded favorably to the deal, driving Group 1’s closing share price up 38% from its previous close.

Siebel Systems (Nasdaq: SEBL) acquires Eontec Limited
Category: Banking Software
Purchase Price: $70,000,000
Seller Revenue: $15,000,000
Revenue Multiple: 4.7x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Siebel Systems acquires Ireland-based Eontec, a provider of multichannel retail banking solutions, its nineteenth acquisition since 1997 and third since last fall. Siebel has targeted banking as a key vertical for its CRM offering, but needed a multichannel solution to compete effectively in the sector. For Eontec, the acquisition comes none too soon, after struggling to penetrate the U.S. market and cutting its workforce by half since 2001. In addition to $70 million cash payment at closing, the deal includes a possible $60 million earnout, a veritable pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Since its founding in 1994, Eontec has received at least $35 million in VC financing from Warburg Pincus, ICC Venture Capital, and other investors.

Sybase (NYSE: SY) acquires XcelleNet
Category: Mobile Middleware
Purchase Price: $95,200,000
Seller Revenue: $30,000,000
Revenue Multiple: 3.2x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Sybase accelerates its push into mobile middleware with the purchase of mobile and remote device management provider XcelleNet. Sybase revenue slid from $964 million in 2000 to $778 million in 2003 after losing a chunk of its database business to Microsoft SQL Server. It’s a big multiple, and a big bet for Sybase, which may use 17% of its total cash assets to aggressively grow a business unit (iAnywhere) that contributed 11% of total revenue last year. The seller, Francisco Partners, bought XcellNet in 2000 from Sterling Commerce for $50 million, a few years after Sterling acquired it for $200 million.

Symantec (Nasdaq: SYMC) acquires Brightmail
Category: Anti-Spam Software
Purchase Price: $370,000,000
Seller Revenue: $26,000,000
Revenue Multiple: 14.2x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Brightmail, a high flying anti-spam provider, opts for a $370 million purchase by Symantec in lieu of a planned IPO, and receives a valuation reminiscent of days gone by. Despite significant revenue growth in the past four years, Brightmail posted its first profit ($1.2 million) in fiscal year ending January ’04, with revenue jumping from $12 million to $26 million. Symantec has had a financial interest in Brightmail since 2000, when it led a fourth-round ($35 million) of equity investment, paying $18 million for an 11% stake (giving Brightmail a $160 million post-money valuation). Brightmail receives 85% of its revenue from only 5% of its customer base, with Microsoft alone accounting for more than 10% of total revenue. Microsoft is now expected to build its own anti-spam software, as well as an antivirus offering that will compete with Symantec.

Trinity Ventures acquires SciQuest (Nasdaq: SQST)
Category: Supply Chain & Logistics Software
Purchase Price: $12,170,000EV
Seller Revenue: $6,630,000
Revenue Multiple: 1.8x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Trinity Ventures, a Menlo Park based venture capital firm, acquires SciQuest, a provider of procurement software for the life sciences and education markets. SciQuest reported a net loss of $16.6 million on revenue of $6.6 million in 2003, compared with a stunning loss of $70.8 million on revenue of $6.5 million in 2002. SciQuest shares traded as high as $90 shortly after the company went public in 1999, but plummeted to 65 cents in May 2003 before it instituted a 7.5-for-1 reverse split, pushing the stock price to $4.87 post-split. The purchase price represents a 55% premium over SciQuest’s closing price before announcement, which surged 47% on news of the deal.

WebMD (NASDAQ: HLTH) acquires Dakota Imaging
Category: Healthcare Management Software
Purchase Price: $40,000,000
Seller Revenue: $17,500,000
Revenue Multiple: 2.3x
Payment Terms: Cash, Stock

SEG’s Perspective:
In its fourth acquisition in less then a year, WebMD bolsters its transaction services department (WebMD Envoy) by acquiring Dakota Imaging, provider of automated healthcare claims processing technology and services. Dakota has grown its revenue an estimated 18.2% YOY and posted an EBITDA of $2.8 million in 2003. Dakota hopes for more of the same, since the deal includes a potential $25 million earnout. With $846 million in cash, plus the recent placement of $100 million worth of convertible debt with a CalPERS-backed fund, look for more acquisitions in the near future by WebMD.

Post Mortem:

Novell (NASDAQ: NOVL) acquires SuSE Linux AG
Category: Linux Software
Purchase Price: $210,000,000
Seller Revenue: $35,400,000
Revenue Multiple: 5.9x
Payment Terms: Cash

SEG’s Perspective:
Novell, provider of networking and connectivity software, acquired Linux software solution provider SuSE Linux on November 4, 2003. Novell is reaping the rewards on its Linux investment, reporting second-quarter net income of $10.4 million, up from a $28.6 million dollar loss in the same quarter a year ago. Revenue was up 6% from a year ago to $293.6 million. The quarter was the first since acquiring SuSE. Novell Chairman and CEO said in a conference call “People…are now finding they don’t have to move off of NetWare” to go to Linux.

EV: Enterprise value
a: Reported by IDC



This report was prepared by Software Equity Group, L.L.C. (SEG), a mergers and acquisitions advisory firm serving the software, life science and technology sectors. SEG is solely responsible for its content. This material is based on data obtained from sources we deem to be reliable; it is not guaranteed as to its accuracy and does not purport to be complete. This information is not to be used as the primary basis of investment decisions. For more, please visit www.softwareequity.com, or phone (858) 509-2800.

     






  Home | About | Recent Issue | Archives | Events | Jobs | Subscribe | Contact | Terms of Agreement
© 2006 The Sterling Report. All rights reserved.