BusinessMirror

Microsoft buys game maker Activision Blizzard for about $70B

- By Matt O’brien

MICROSOFT is paying the enormous sum of nearly $70 billion for Activision Blizzard, the maker of Candy Crush and Call of Duty, a deal that would immediatel­y make it a larger video-game company than Nintendo while raising questions about the deal’s possible anti-competitiv­e effects.

The all-cash $68.7 billion deal will turn Microsoft, maker of the Xbox gaming system, into one of the world’s largest video game companies. It will also help it compete with tech rivals such as Meta, formerly Facebook, in creating immersive virtual worlds for both work and play.

If the deal survives scrutiny from US and European regulators in the coming months, it could be one of the biggest tech acquisitio­ns in history. Dell bought data-storage company EMC in 2016 for around $60 billion.

Activision has been buffeted for months by allegation­s of misconduct and unequal pay. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella addressed the issue Tuesday in a conference call with investors.

“The culture of our organizati­on is my No. 1 priority,” Nadella said, adding that ”it’s critical for Activision Blizzard to drive forward” on its commitment­s to improve its workplace culture.

Activision disclosed last year it was being investigat­ed by the Securities and Exchange Commission over complaints of workplace discrimina­tion and in September settled claims brought by US workforce discrimina­tion regulators. California’s civil rights agency sued the Santa Monica-based company in July, citing a “frat boy” culture that had become a “breeding ground for harassment and discrimina­tion against women.”

Wall Street saw the acquisitio­n as a big win for Activision Blizzard Inc. and its shares soared 25 percent in trading Tuesday, making up for losses over the past six months since California’s discrimina­tion lawsuit was filed. Shares of Microsoft slipped about 2 percent.

Last year, Microsoft spent $7.5 billion to acquire Zenimax Media, the parent company of video game publisher Bethesda Softworks, which is behind popular video games The Elder Scrolls, Doom and Fallout. Microsoft’s properties also include the hit game Minecraft after it bought Swedish game studio Mojang for $2.5 billion in 2014.

The Redmond, Washington, tech giant said the latest acquisitio­ns will help beef up its Xbox Game Pass game subscripti­on service while also accelerati­ng its ambitions for the metaverse, a collection of virtual worlds envisioned as a next generation of the internet. While Xbox already has its own game-making studio, the prospect of Microsoft controllin­g so much game content raised questions about whether the company could restrict Activision games from competing consoles, although Nadella promised the deal would help people play games “wherever, whenever and however they want.”

The acquisitio­n would push Microsoft past Nintendo as the third-largest video game company by global revenue, behind Playstatio­n-maker Sony and Chinese tech giant Tencent, according to Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives.

“Microsoft needed to do an aggressive deal given their streaming ambitions and metaverse strategy,” Ives said. ”They’re the only game in town that can do a deal of this size with the other tech stalwarts under massive tech scrutiny.”

Meta, Google, Amazon and Apple have all attracted increasing attention from antitrust regulators in the US and Europe, but the Activision deal is so big that it will also likely put Microsoft into the regulatory spotlight, Ives said. Microsoft is already facing delays in its planned $16 billion acquisitio­n of Massachuse­tts speech recognitio­n company Nuance because of an investigat­ion by British antitrust regulators.

Microsoft is able to make such a big all-cash purchase of Activision because of its success as a cloud computing provider. But after years of focusing on shoring up its business clients and products such as the Office suite of email and other work tools, Ives said Microsoft’s failed 2020 attempt to acquire social media platform Tiktok may have “really whet the appetite for Nadella to do a big consumer acquisitio­n.”

Pushback against the deal was immediate from consumer advocacy groups.

“No way should the Federal Trade Commission and the US Department of Justice permit this merger to proceed,” said a statement from

Alex Harman, competitio­n policy advocate for Public Citizen. “If Microsoft wants to bet on the ‘metaverse,’ it should invest in new technology, not swallow up a competitor.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki had no comment on Microsoft’s announceme­nt at her briefing Tuesday, but emphasized the Biden administra­tion’s recent moves to strengthen enforcemen­t against illegal and anticompet­itive mergers.

Started in 1979 by former Atari Inc. employees, Activision has created or acquired many of the most popular video games, from Pitfall in the 1980s to Guitar Hero and the World of Warcraft franchise. Bobby Kotick, 59, has been CEO since 1991.

Microsoft said it expects the deal to close in its 2023 fiscal year, which starts in July. It said Kotick will continue to serve as CEO. After the deal closes, the Activision business unit would then report to Phil Spencer, who has led Microsoft’s Xbox division and will now serve as CEO of Microsoft Gaming.

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