eBay hangs up on Skype
Washington (AFP) Sept 1, 2009 EBay ended its troubled marriage with Skype on Tuesday, agreeing to sell a majority stake to a group of investors in a deal that values the Web communications service at 2.75 billion dollars. The online auction giant, which will retain a 35 percent equity investment in Skype, said it will receive 1.9 billion dollars in cash upon the completion of the sale and a note from the purchasers for 125 million dollars. The buyer group, which will control a 65 percent stake in Skype, is led by private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, whose portfolio includes Ameritrade, Intelsat, NASDAQ, Travelocity and Seagate Technology. Its other members are London-based Index Ventures, an early investor in Skype, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Andreessen Horowitz, a venture capital firm founded by Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen. Andreessen, whose investments include LinkedIn and Twitter, is a member of the boards of eBay and Facebook and is chairman of the board of Ning, an online platform for creating social networks. The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of the year. EBay purchased Skype in 2005 for a price tag that eventually exceeded 3.1 billion dollars, including payouts to Web entrepreneurs Niklas Zennstrom of Sweden and Janus Friis of Denmark, who founded the company in 2003. But eBay has acknowledged that Skype was not a good fit with its core auction and online payments business PayPal and announced plans in April to spin off the company with an initial public offering in 2010. At the same time, the San Jose, California-based eBay said it would entertain offers for Skype. "This deal achieves our goal of delivering short- and long-term value to eBay and its stockholders, without the possible delays and market risk of an IPO," eBay president and chief executive John Donahoe said in a statement. "Selling Skype now at this great valuation, while retaining an equity stake, makes sense for the company," he said. "This is a great deal, unlocking both immediate and long-term value for eBay and tremendous potential for Skype. "We've acted decisively on a deal that delivers a high valuation, gives us significant cash up-front and lets us retain a meaningful minority stake with talented partners," Donahoe said. "Skype is a strong stand-alone business, but it does not have synergies with our e-commerce and online payments businesses," he said. "As a separate company, we believe that Skype will have the focus required to compete effectively in online voice and video communications and accelerate its growth momentum," Donahoe said. Silver Lake managing director Egon Durban said the transaction "benefits all parties involved and will allow Skype the opportunity to accelerate the growth of its business." Skype, which has its headquarters in Luxembourg, bypasses the standard telephone network by channeling voice and video calls over the Internet. Its allows users to call others free of charge and provides the ability to connect with land lines or mobile devices at low rates. Skype's revenue rose by 44 percent in 2008 to 551 million dollars and its number of users increased by 47 percent to 405 million. EBay shares lost 2.08 percent on Wall Street on Tuesday to close at 21.68 dollars. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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