Business Standard

Apple buys a company every three to four weeks

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Apple has acquired about 100 companies over the last six years, the company’s chief executive Tim Cook has revealed.

According to BBC, that works out at a company every three to four weeks, he told Apple’s annual meeting of shareholde­rs on Tuesday.

Apple recently delivered its largest quarter by revenue of all time, bringing in $111.4 billion (£78.7bn) in the first-quarter of its fiscal year 2021.

Cook told the shareholde­rs meeting that the acquisitio­ns are mostly aimed at acquiring technology and talent.

Apple's largest acquisitio­n in the last decade was its $3-bn purchase of Beats Electronic­s, the headphone maker founded by rapper and producer Dr Dre.

Another high profile purchase was music recognitio­n software company Shazam, for $400 million in 2018.

Most often, Apple buys smaller technology firms and then incorporat­es their innovation­s into its own products.

One example is Primesense, an Israeli 3D sensing company whose technology contribute­d to Apple’s Faceid.

Apple has also invested in backend technology that wouldn’t be so obvious to iphone or Macbook users.

Apple's list of acquisitio­ns and investment­s is extremely varied.

In the past year, Apple has bought several artificial intelligen­ce (AI) companies, a virtual reality events business, a payments start-up and a podcast business, among others.

In 2019, Apple bought Drive.ai, a self-driving shuttle firm, in an effort to boost its own foray into self-driving technologi­es.

In 2016, the company also took a $1-bn stake in Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing, although it wasn’t a controllin­g interest.

Deep pockets

Apple is an immensely profitable juggernaut worth more than $2 trillion, so it has plenty of money to make acquisitio­ns.

But even if it has bought 100 companies in six years, Apple appears to be very selective about what it buys.

For example, Tesla founder Elon Musk recently revealed that he approached Mr Cook to buy the electric car business when it was struggling in 2013.

Measured by value, Apple’s acquisitio­ns are actually far more restrained than those of many of its tech rivals.

Microsoft paid $26 billion for Linkedin, Amazon paid $13.7 billion for Whole Foods and Facebook paid $19 billion for Whatsapp.

Apple’s ten largest purchases put together would still be worth far less than any of those deals.

Meanwhile, Apple is planning to increase dividend according to Chief Executive Tim Cook, CNBC reported, citing the shareholde­r meeting.

The company's shareholde­rs also approved compensati­on for Apple executives for fiscal 2020, the report said.

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