Times Colonist

Apple’s huge stash of cash spurs talk of big acquisitio­n

- MICHAEL LIEDTKE

SAN FRANCISCO — As Apple’s stash of cash grows, so does the possibilit­y the world’s most valuable company will use some of the money for a huge acquisitio­n that would expand its empire beyond iPhones and other gadgets.

The company holds more than a quarter-trillion dollars it could use to go shopping. So far, the guessing game has primarily focused on possible targets such as Netflix and Tesla Motors. Either deal could make sense, given Apple’s long-running interest in providing a TV service to consumers and its more recent work on self-driving cars. But in recent months, the takeover talk has swirled around whether Apple might do something even more dramatic by making a bid for Walt Disney Co.

Such a combinatio­n would create the world’s first company worth $1 trillion. Beyond that, an Apple-Disney marriage would unite some of the world’s most successful brands in technology and entertainm­ent — a list that includes the iPhone, iPad, Mac computer, Mickey Mouse, Disneyland, ESPN, Lucasfilm, Pixar and Marvel.

“If there’s a deal out there that would strike fear in the hearts of Silicon Valley and Hollywood, this could be it,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Amit Daryanani wrote in a recent research report assessing the logic of an AppleDisne­y combinatio­n.

Apple doesn’t discuss specific companies that it might buy, but it’s exploring far and wide, according to chief financial officer Luca Maestri. “We are looking at every size of acquisitio­n, so we will see how it goes going forward,” Maestri told the Associated Press in a Tuesday interview.

Disney hasn’t given any inclinatio­n that it’s looking for a buyer, but publicly held companies are required to consider all takeover offers. Buying Disney would be expensive. Daryanani estimates that Apple would have to pay $157 US per share, or about $250 billion US.

Apple is one of the few companies — if not the only one — that could pay that sum out of its pocket. The Cupertino, California, company ended March with nearly $257 billion in cash and marketable securities, according to numbers released Tuesday with Apple’s earnings report for the January-March quarter.

That’s up from $233 billion US a year ago, and the figure is expected to keep growing as Apple piles up more profits from the iPhone, iPad and Mac, as well as the applicatio­ns and services that feed those devices. In its latest quarter, Apple’s earnings climbed five per cent to $11 billion while revenue also rose five per cent to nearly $53 billion.

In recent years, Apple has used a large chunk of its cash to provide its shareholde­rs with extra income. The company disclosed plans on Tuesday to raise its quarterly dividend by more than 10 per cent to 63 cents per share, marking the fifth increase in five years. Apple also has spent $151 billion buying back its own stock since 2012.

Doing a mega-deal would be a major departure for Apple, whose largest acquisitio­n to date was its $3 billion purchase of Beats Electronic­s in 2014 that helped launch its music streaming service.

But Daryanani and other analysts believe Apple might need to make a pricier acquisitio­n to lessen the company’s dependence on the iPhone at a time when smartphone sales have been slowing. IPhone sales edged up 1 per cent in Apple’s latest quarter, extending a recovery from an unpreceden­ted downturn last year.

But many investors remain concerned that Apple has become too vulnerable to the ups and downs of the smartphone market, mostly because the company hasn’t been able to come up with another hit product since the 2011 death of its co-founder and CEO, Steve Jobs. Apple’s last big success, the iPad, came out in 2010, but sales of the tablet have been declining for more than three years.

The iPhone accounted for nearly two-thirds of Apple’s revenue in the past quarter.

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