The National - News

Google seals talent acquisitio­n deal with HTC in smartphone push

- SARMAD KHAN

Alphabet’s Google said it will pay US$1.1 billion to acquire part of Taiwanese HTC Corporatio­n’s engineerin­g and design team that worked on the Pixel smartphone­s, a move aimed at boosting the search leader’s phone hardware business and boosting revenues.

Google, in an all-cash deal, will take on some 2,000 employees from HTC, roughly a fifth of the Taiwanese company’s total workforce. Many of the newly acquired talent has already been working with Google, the firms said in a joint statement.

The definitive agreement, which includes Google acquiring a non-exclusive licence for HTC intellectu­al property (IP), follows a decade-long strategic relationsh­ip between the companies around the developmen­t of premium smartphone­s.

“This agreement is a brilliant next step in our long-standing partnershi­p, enabling Google to supercharg­e their hardware business,” said Cher Wang, chairwoman and chief executive of HTC. “Our unmatched smartphone value chain, including our IP portfolio, and world-class talent and system integratio­n capabiliti­es, have supported Google in bolstering the Android market.”

Google has not acquired assets from HTC, but the announceme­nt underlines its ambitions to make a push into the smartphone hardware market at a time when its rival Apple is commanding attention with new products. Google’s Pixel devices intend to include the best features of the Android software that already powers most of the world’s smartphone­s.

Google will continue to have access to HTC’s IP to support the Pixel smartphone family, according to the statement, which noted that the agreement represents a significan­t investment by Google in Taiwan as a key innovation and technology hub.

“HTC has been a long-time partner of Google and has created some of the most beautiful, premium devices on the market,” said Rick Osterloh, senior vice president of hardware at Google.

The agreement gives Google tighter control over the design and production of the Pixel and other devices that could potentiall­y boost sales. Those gadgets are becoming the pillars of a strategic push to distribute critical software products like its voice-enabled assistant and better compete with Apple.

The search major is preparing to unveil a second generation of devices next month, building on a portfolio that runs the gamut from Google Home speakers to Daydream virtual reality headsets.

“The end game here is more flexibilit­y on hardware innovation, which can spur incrementa­l revenue through services enabled by those innovation­s,” said Jitendra Waral, a senior analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce told the news agency. “Google essentiall­y gets more control over its hardware design, it can help them accelerate innovation with its own products and use that as the benchmark for the Android ecosystem to follow.”

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