M&A Flops
M&A Flops
M&A Flops
Flops
1. Microsoft and Nokia
Price: $7.9B
Microsoft was late to the mobile game and quickly fell behind Apple and
Android in the platform wars. While November 2010 saw the release of the
new Windows Phone with a new platform, it never caught on with
consumers. In 2013, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer saw an opportunity in
Nokia, a Finnish phone company that was losing ground to competitors.
Ballmer led Microsoft’s purchase of Nokia for over $7B in a deal finalized in
2014. But the acquisition quickly turned into a flop as their new joint
project, the Lumia phone line, didn’t garner the developer and carrier
partnerships needed for the phone to catch on. Ballmer left Microsoft that
same year and new CEO Satya Nadella had to do significant restructuring
and layoffs to streamline the company, including cutting 15,000 Nokia
employees. In 2015, the acquisition was written down for $7.6B.
2. Google and Nest
Price: $3.2B
Price: $210M
Date: 2012
Price: $677M
6. HP and Autonomy
Price: $11.1B
Chairman and CEO Leo Apotheker, during his brief time in charge at HP,
backed the company’s $11.1B acquisition of Autonomy, a European data
analytics company. Aside from baffling industry experts as to how the new
company would fit into HP’s strategy, it came out in 2012 that Autonomy
had cooked its books and had been massively overvalued during the
acquisition. With Apotheker fired in 2011 for a slew of missteps that had
contributed to the company’s massive losses, nothing ever came of the
acquisition. Instead, Autonomy’s purchase was written down as a $9B loss
and in 2016 HP sold off their Autonomy assets.
Price: $12.5B
Price: $590M
When Cisco paid almost $600M for Pure Digital in 2009, it probably
seemed like a great investment for their consumer products department;
Pure Digital’s Flip HD digital camera was a hot seller at the time.
Unfortunately for Cisco, this was also right around the time when
high-definition digital cameras were becoming standard in every
smartphone. In 2011, Cisco killed the Flip and then proceeded to gut their
consumer products division in an overall realignment designed to get
Cisco focused on networking again, according to then-CEO John
Chambers.
Price: $2.34B
While Wendy’s was never really in a position to unseat McDonald’s as the
country’s top fast-food burger chain, its 2008 acquisition by Nelson Peltz
(the billionaire owner of Arby’s) and merger with the roast beef sandwich
chain never got it any closer to fast-food dominance. One professed
reason for the $2B+ acquisition was to help both companies benefit
through increased scale. But their combined forces didn’t help Wendy’s
improve sales and failed to have a meaningful impact on Arby’s. Three
years later the then-named Wendy’s/Arby’s Group sold off Arby’s to
private equity firm Roark.
Price: $4.1B
Price: $500M
When mobile phone company Danger Inc was created in the heady days
of 2000 with execs from Apple, Phillips, and WebTV, it looked like a
leadership dream team. Its best-known early product was the “Danger
Hiptop,” rebranded as the “T-Mobile Sidekick.” By 2008, they’d caught the
eye of Microsoft, which acquired them for an undisclosed amount,
rumored to be in the neighborhood of $500M, and folded all of Danger’s
employees into their Mobile Communications Business to work on a
forthcoming mobile platform. In October 2009, one of Danger’s data
centers, which hosted personal customer data, suffered a catastrophic
failure that took them two months to recover from. Meanwhile, after two
years of development and about a billion dollars spent, a new phone rolled
out in April of 2010 under the name Microsoft KIN. Unfortunately, that
phone failed so spectacularly that it’s on our list of corporate innovation
fails. The Kins 1 and 2 launched without instant messaging, calendar
support, GPS, and more, and they came down after only about six weeks
on the market.
12. Microsoft and aQuantive
Price: $6.3B
Price: $13.4B
Price: $4.2B
In the mid-2000s, the nuclear energy business was supposed to take off,
and Japanese conglomerate Toshiba wanted a slice of the pie and
purchased Westinghouse Electric, one of the largest manufacturers of
nuclear reactors in the world. Toshiba already built nuclear power plants
locally in Japan, but the acquisition would allow it to expand and win
contracts in new markets like China and India. Toshiba obtained 77% of
the nuclear power company for $4.2B — a decision that nearly caused the
Japanese company to go bankrupt. The problems stemmed from higher
than expected construction costs and delays at two American plants.
Toshiba was forced to write off $6.3B in losses, declare bankruptcy at
Westinghouse, and eventually to sell the Westinghouse unit to Brookfield
Asset Management.
Price: $2.6B
When eBay’s leaders acquired VoIP business Skype for $2.6B in 2005, the
thinking was that enhanced communications technology would help
buyers and sellers better connect. The outcome was less than spectacular,
though, with few eBay users (buyers, sellers, or shippers) having any real
reason to communicate in any way besides email. eBay also changed the
management team in charge of Skype a reported four times during its four
years with the e-commerce site, before selling off 65% of the company to
Silver Lake, Andreessen Horowitz, and the Canada Pension Plan
Investment Board in 2009 for $1.9B.
16. Sprint and Nextel
Amount: $35B
Price: $580M
Before there was Facebook, there was Myspace. In 2006, it was the
most-visited website in the US, even beating out Google. That
skyrocketing popularity is likely what made Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp
think it was worth spending $580M to acquire the social network. And in
the short-term, that would have looked like a good deal, as the social
media site hit its peak in 2007 at a value of about $12B. At that point,
though, some critical mistakes were made. For starters, rather than
doubling down on its value as a social network, News Corp chose to focus
on making the site a music and entertainment portal. With a number of
poorly executed redesigns aimed at increasing ad income, the final blow
came from none other than Facebook: The then-fledgeling social network
had an API that allowed other companies to build new applications for
Facebook, while Myspace kept all development in-house. As of April 2009,
Facebook had already caught up to Myspace in unique visitors, and by
April 2011, Myspace would see fewer than 40,000 unique monthly visitors
to Facebook’s 150,000+. Specific Media and Justin Timberlake bought up
the once-mighty network for about $35M in 2011, a considerable loss from
what News Corp paid for it and even more of a loss from its formerly
sky-high valuation.
18. Sears and Kmart
Price: $11B
When you’re a powerhouse brand, it can be hard to see that the times are
changing. In the early 2000s, venerable retailers Sears and Kmart began
losing ground to Walmart and Target, with Kmart even filing for Chapter 11
in 2002. Then, in 2005, Eddie Lampert, of the hedge fund that controlled
Kmart, saw an opportunity in Sears’ diminished status to acquire the
company, merge it with Kmart, and create the combined “Sears Holdings.”
Sears’ had already started buying up Super Kmart locations as part of its
strategy of opening off-mall stores, and the merger helped speed that up.
In addition, the merged companies were also meant to share proprietary
brands and achieve cost savings by reconciling supply chain and
administrative overhead. Whatever the hopes were before the acquisition,
though, there haven’t been major positive impacts on either brand; Sears
has lost about $7B since the merger. During 2014 and 2015, sizable
chunks of the Sears business were sold off, including Lands’ End and the
company’s stake in Sears Canada. Sears declared bankruptcy in October
2018.
19. Cisco and Linksys
Price: $500M
When top networking company Cisco acquired Linksys in 2003 for $500M,
it seemed like a natural fit: Cisco would continue catering to larger
organizations, while Linksys would keep selling to home/small business
customers. That plan might have worked, if Linksys’ market hadn’t quickly
become saturated with competitors (Netgear, D-Link, etc.). At the same
time, ISPs were starting to provide and sell their own routers to customers,
which further shrank the market for these once-critical devices. Under
Cisco, product quality at Linksys also slipped and even a complete
redesign of Linksys’ products in 2011 turned out to be too little, too late. In
2013, Cisco decided to cut its losses in the consumer products division
and sell Linksys off to Belkin.
In the early 2000s, HP and Compaq were the two giants of the personal
computer business, but they were rapidly losing market share to
lower-cost rivals such as Dell. HP’s Carly Fiorina believed the merged
company, with annual sales of approximately $90B, would give HP a
greater economy of scale in the PC business, allowing it to compete in an
increasingly commoditized industry. While the merger may have made
sense on paper, the problem was integrating two separate, highly complex
entities. HP and Compaq’s core businesses overlapped, and one of the
key reasons for the merger was that it would enable cost-cutting. The
company cut 15,000 employees, nearly 10% of its workforce, by 2005.
Before the merger, HP’s share price sat at around $10 per share. A year
later, it dropped to $6.
Price: $11.5B
In 2000, the Swiss bank Credit Suisse acquired the brokerage Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette (DLJ) in an effort to bolster its investment banking arm.
Credit Suisse paid nearly three times the book value for DLJ, and got little
in return. The biggest problem was one of culture, and much of DLJ’s key
talent left the company following the acquisition. Nearly two decades after
the acquisition, in 2016, Credit Suisse wrote-off $3.8B in losses associated
with the acquisition of DLJ.
Price: $12.5B
At the peak of the dot-com bubble, the web portal company Lycos was
flying high, with an estimated 50M users and 175M page views per day.
Eager to get in on the action and capitalize on the growing number of Latin
American internet users, the Spanish telecom company Terra Networks
purchased Lycos in a $12.5B stock-for-stock deal. Lycos simply couldn’t
compete with better offerings from the likes of Google, and in 2004, Terra
sold Lycos for a meager $95M.
23. AOL and Time Warner
Price: $164B
In the heady days of the dot-com bubble, the $164B merger of Time
Warner and AOL combined old and new media companies into a potential
powerhouse. But behind the scenes, things were anything but ideal: the
dot-com bubble burst, cultures refused to jibe, and dial-up internet went
the way of … dial-up internet. The mega-company reported a $45B
write-down in 2003 and then a $100B yearly loss. By 2009, Time Warner
had spun off the once-mighty internet titan back into a separate entity.
Price: $32B
By the mid-1990s, Vivendi had come a long way from its humble origins as
a French water company to a media powerhouse, fueled by the
acquisitions and deals in the media and telecom industry. In 2000, the
company acquired Seagram, the owner of Universal Studios, for a $32B
all-stock deal. The internet revolution was just underway, and the
acquisition was intended to allow Vivendi to capitalize on Universal’s large
film and music library through its internet portal, Vizzavi, and compete with
AOL Time Warner. Unfortunately, Vizzavi never took off. By 2004, Vivendi
was burdened with debt and sold 80% of Vivendi-Universal Studios to GE.
It took Vivendi another 15 years of litigation to settle a $26M lawsuit that it
had misled shareholders over the deal.
Price: $10.1B
Back in the mid-1990s, Deutsche Bank was looking to compete with Wall
Street banks like Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan by acquiring institutions
like Bankers Trust, a troubled Wall Street firm that had just suffered a
corporate accounting fraud scandal. At the time, Bankers Trust specialized
in two things: risky financial derivatives and making loans to businesses
that other banks wouldn’t take on. Even with the scandal, by buying
Bankers Trust, Deutsche Bank became a global investment bank. For a
time, it seemed like the gamble had paid off. In mid-2007, Deutsche Bank
was the world’s biggest bank, with nearly $2T in assets. But 16 years after
it bought Bankers Trust, Deutsche Bank wrote off billions of dollars from
the acquisition.
Price: $3.6B
Combining two of the biggest names in the car world in 1998 seemed like
a sure thing. Daimler bet heavily on the union, paying $36B to merge with
Chrysler. But leadership changes quickly created issues for the merged
company. The retirement of Chrysler CEO Bob Eaton led to Daimler taking
majority control, and soon after, other high-ranking Chrysler executives,
including the president and vice-chair, were forced out. With Daimler in full
control, it immediately began pouring resources into Chrysler, but
language and cultural differences and misjudged product launches saw
Chrysler losing market share quickly. A recession and continued poor
sales spelled the end of this once-promising union. In 2007, Daimler sold
off 80% of Chrysler to Cerberus Capital Management for $7B.
Price: $9.1B
This merger seems to have been a victim of the dot-com bubble of the late
90s/early 2000s. Originally a Bell subsidiary founded in 1880, by the 90s
Northern Telecom was one of Canada’s most important tech companies.
In 1998, the company was doing so well that it had $9B to spend acquiring
network hardware vendor Bay Networks. The new company renamed itself
Nortel Networks and envisioned a path to success built primarily on selling
fiber optic networking equipment. Wall Street saw dollar signs and
speculation drove stock prices to highs like C$124 ($90) per share and a
market cap of C$398 billion ($268) in September of 2000. The stock crash
would leave the company trading at C$.47 ($.32) in August of 2002. It filed
for Chapter 11 in January of 2009.
Date: 1998
Price: $4.2B
Mattel has been a big name in old-fashioned toys for decades, but in 1998
the company decided to try to get into the burgeoning high-tech toys and
software game by acquiring The Learning Company, makers of “Where in
the World is Carmen Sandiego?” and “Myst,” in a stock-for-stock deal that
valued TLC at about $4.2B. Problems started almost immediately, as a
high volume of year-end returns came back to The Learning Company,
causing it to show a $206M loss for 1999. This was a huge hit to Mattel’s
bottom line. A year later, Mattel in effect gave away its burdensome
acquisition to Gores Technology Group in a zero-cash-upfront deal. Mattel
took an after-tax loss of $430M, with a possibility of making some money
back if Gores got the company to profitability, which did actually happen
only 75 days after the handoff. Then, in 2001, Gores sold some non-core
entertainment assets to French video game company Ubisoft and
education assets to Riverdeep, a software company that develops K-12
learning solutions.
Amount: $1.4B
Price: $1.43B
Date: 1994
Price: $1.7B
Here’s one for the CPG fans: In 1987, Quaker Oats acquired Gatorade.
That union worked so well that the company decided to double down with
the acquisition of Snapple for $1.7B in 1994. One of the first criticisms
levied against the beloved breakfast cereal company was that it’d overpaid
for Snapple. But then Quaker Oats embarked on a botched marketing
campaign to get Snapple into grocery stores and restaurants, ignoring the
drink’s niche in gas stations and convenience stores. Nothing it did
seemed to work and about two years later Quaker Oats sold off Snapple
for $300M — “Real Facts” and all.
Price: $350M
In 1991, Novell was a force to be reckoned with in the business networking
game, with their NetWare software well-regarded and popular for local
area networking. But when Microsoft included networking elements in
Windows for Workgroups 3.1 in 1992 and Windows NT in 1993 the
software became a serious threat to Novell. In order to try to stay relevant,
Novell bought AT&T’s Bell Unix Systems Laboratories (USL) for $350M,
with the goal to create a new system that combined Netware’s networking
abilities with the UNIX operating system. The resulting OS, UnixWare,
apparently failed to live up to company expectations and Novell sold USL
off to another software company SCO in 1995. The story didn’t end there,
though – this sale ended up spiraling into a copyright lawsuit that went to
court in 2003 and wasn’t resolved until 2010.
Price: $439M
Price: $7.4B
Price: $4.8B
In 1989, Sony paid $3.2B in cash and $1.6B in debt to purchase Columbia
Pictures. Sony paid a steep premium on the deal, shelling out an estimated
$27 per share compared to Columbia’s share price of $12 at the beginning
of that year. Recognizing the mismatch between corporate cultures, Sony
executives mistakenly made the decision to allow Columbia to operate
independently and autonomously. Costs at Columbia Pictures ballooned,
while most of its big-budget films produced in the years following the deal
flopped. By 1994, Sony had written off $2.7B of its investment in Columbia
plus an additional $510M in operating losses from the unit.
Source: CBInsights