eBay Acts Like a Grownup
This column was originally published on RealMoney on Sept. 12 at 12:07 p.m. EDT. It's being republished as a bonus for TheStreet.com readers.
Well, the rumors were true. Last week The Wall Street Journal reported that eBay(EBAY Quote) was in talks to buy VoIP-provider Skype for $2 billion to $3 billion, and the New York Post reported the price was going to be somewhere around $5 billion.
The final deal is for eBay to buy Skype for $2.6 billion in cash and stock with another $1.5 billion coming over the next four years based on performance incentives. This deal has implications for eBay, for Internet stocks in general, and for other VoIP plays.
This remains a highly unusual deal for eBay for the reasons I mentioned last week:
- As opposed to PayPal, the acquisition of which was highly complementary to eBay's business, Skype really has nothing in common with the eBay auction business. PayPal was already a vendor for eBay and many of eBay's customers were paying for purchases using PayPal. The acquisition tightened the relationship between the shopping experience and the paying experience and brought it all under one roof, allowing a reduction in costs for eBay.
- Skype is not a mature business at all and it's unusual (as in it's never happened) for eBay to pay such a large price for an unknown quantity. Skype had $7 million in revenue last year and some estimates say it can make up to $200 million in revenue by 2007, but the reality is -- who knows. And, still, with $200 million in revenue and a $4.1 billion potential acquisition cost, it doesn't really add up.
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