Morning Sun

Microsoft to buy Nuance for $19.7B

- By Dina Bass and Liana Baker

Microsoft Corp. is buying speech technology company Nuance Communicat­ions Inc. in an all-cash deal valued at $19.7 billion, including debt, making a massive bet on health care artificial intelligen­ce.

The software giant is offering to purchase Nuance at $56 a share, a 23% premium to Friday’s close, according to a statement Monday, which confirmed an earlier Bloomberg report. The deal marks Microsoft’s largest acquisitio­n since Linkedin Corp. The deal will “minimally” decrease earnings in the year that begins July 1 and start to add to profit the following year, Microsoft said.

Microsoft is tapping the company tied to the Siri voice technology to develop solutions that free doctors from note-taking and better predict a patient’s needs. It has been working with Nuance for two years on AI software that helps clinicians capture patient discussion­s and integrate them into electronic health records, and combining the speech technology company’s products into its Teams chat app for telehealth appointmen­ts.

The “Nuance deal would be a trophy for Redmond,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, referring to Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft, said before the deal was officially announced. “Nuance is in the midst of an unpreceden­ted strategic turnaround the last few years under the leadership of CEO Mark Benjamin and we believe the company represents a unique asset on the health care front for Microsoft.”

Under Benjamin, Nuance has narrowed its focus and separated peripheral businesses, such as Cerence Inc., the automotive AI unit that was spun off two years ago. It also sold its imaging division to Thoma Bravo’s Kofax for $400 million, and zoomed in instead on partnershi­ps with health-care providers and the biggest electronic medical records companies.

Microsoft has been trying to make inroads into the health-care sector, selling more cloud software to hospitals and doctors. As AI software gets better at parsing language and predicting medical needs, Nuance and Microsoft may be able to develop technology that searches for certain words in health records to make better suggestion­s to doctors for patient care.

As of Friday, Nuance’s shares have climbed 3.4% this year, giving the company that laid the groundwork for the technology used in Apple Inc.’s Siri a market value of almost $13 billion.

The gain still trailed the 9.9% jump in the S&P 500 Index, while Microsoft added 15%. Microsoft shares were little changed in premarket trading Monday and Nuance rose 23%.

“This can really help Microsoft accelerate the digitizati­on of the health-care industry, which has lagged other sectors such as retail and banking,” said Anurag Rana, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce senior analyst, said before the announceme­nt. “The biggest near-term benefit that I can see is in the area of telehealth, where Nuance transcript­ion product is currently being used with Microsoft Teams.”

Nuance, whose products include Dragon speech-recognitio­n software, had net income of $91 million on revenue of $1.48 billion for its fiscal year ending Sept. 30., after losing $217 million the previous year.

Microsoft has also been increasing­ly focused on health care. In May, the software maker unveiled a package of industry-specific cloud software, and has also hired executives with medical background­s and researchin­g machine learning and AI tools for areas including clinical trials.

Coincident­ally, one of Microsoft’s Boston area offices is located right next to Nuance’s headquarte­rs.

With a market value of $1.93 trillion, the most in the world after Apple, Microsoft remains active on the deals front. Last month, Bloomberg News reported that the software giant was in talks to acquire Discord Inc., a video game chat community, for more than $10 billion. It also bought video game maker Zenimax Media Inc. for $7.5 billion in cash in a deal that closed this year.

The Nuance purchase would rank as Microsoft’s second-largest acquisitio­n, behind the 2016 Linkedin purchase at an equity value of more than $26 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States