Los Angeles Times

Buyout rumors for Twitter

The two tech firms are among several said to be interested in buying the social media company.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga

Salesforce, Google are among several firms said to be interested in acquiring the social media company.

Shares of Twitter Inc. surged Friday after reports that the social media company could receive a formal bid soon.

Citing unnamed sources, CNBC reported that Twitter has received “expression­s of interest” from several tech companies and was “engaged in conversati­ons with potential suitors.”

Those companies are said to include Google and cloud computing software firm Salesforce.com Inc., according to CNBC.

On Wall Street, Twitter stock closed up $3.99, or 21.4%, at $22.62. The company’s market capitaliza­tion is $15.9 billion, according to Factset.

Twitter and Google did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

A Salesforce spokeswoma­n said in an email that the company does not comment on “rumors or speculatio­n.”

San Francisco-based Twitter has often been the target of takeover speculatio­n.

The company has struggled to increase its user base, and has tried to expand its platform by increasing its live streamed sports coverage.

In April, Twitter signed a deal with the NFL to livestream Thursday night football games. The company followed this up with an agreement in July with the Pac-12 Networks to livestream at least 150 conference games during the 20162017 school year.

Twitter has also signed a deal with the NBA that would allow the company to stream two new, exclusive shows and additional video.

These plans were unlikely to jump-start user growth, but they could help bolster brand awareness or drive revenue.

And Twitter’s potential profitabil­ity is probably what’s attractive to possible suitors, said Michael Pachter, research analyst at Wedbush Securities.

Although Twitter might not seem like a natural fit with any of the rumored suitors, Pachter said companies could try to integrate it into existing platforms. Salesforce.com, for example, might see a fit with its customer database management software.

In a tweet Friday, Salesforce executive Vala Afshar said Twitter was a “great place to promote others” and “the best realtime, context rich news.”

Later, Afshar noted that he has tweeted his “personal views regarding ‘Why Twitter?’ ” several times over the last few years.

“I simply love Twitter,” he said.

Investors apparently didn’t share Afshar’s views. Shares of Salesforce fell $4.20, or 5.6%, to $70.39 at the close of Friday trading on Wall Street.

“Because of the size of the deal that would be required, because of the nature of the way you would fund it, there’s a real fear that not only is Salesforce reaching into things it does not understand, but it would cause a true, meaningful distractio­n to the core of its business,” said Alex Zukin, managing director and equity research analyst at Piper Jaffray.

“I think there are many intelligen­t moves for Salesforce to make from an M&A perspectiv­e that would be more relevant [and] understand­able than buying Twitter,” Zukin said.

Google, with its strong advertisin­g platform, makes more sense, Pachter said. Google’s engineers could make Twitter easier to use, which could drive user growth, and its sales team could increase advertisin­g opportunit­ies, he said.

“Twitter certainly has value if someone runs the company to maximize profitabil­ity,” Pachter said.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? TWITTER has often been the target of takeover speculatio­n. On Wall Street, Twitter stock closed up $3.99, or 21.4%, at $22.62 on Friday. The company’s market capitaliza­tion is $15.9 billion, according to Factset.
Richard Drew Associated Press TWITTER has often been the target of takeover speculatio­n. On Wall Street, Twitter stock closed up $3.99, or 21.4%, at $22.62 on Friday. The company’s market capitaliza­tion is $15.9 billion, according to Factset.

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