Facebook is betting huge on mobile with an eye-popping
cash-and-stock deal worth up to Sh1.6 trillion ($19 billion) for
Internet Age smartphone messaging service WhatsApp.
The
surprise mega-deal announced Wednesday bolsters the world's biggest
social network -- which has more than 1.2 billion members -- with the
450-million-strong WhatsApp, which will be operated independently with
its own board.
It fits with Facebook founder Mark
Zuckerberg's focus on being at the centre of lifestyles in which
billions of people around the world share whatever they wish over the
Internet using smartphones or tablets.
"Facebook works harder than any other social site to keep people coming back," said Forrester analyst Nate Elliott.
"In
the past year, they've focused much of that effort on mobile --
introducing Home and Paper, and upgrading both their Facebook and
Messenger apps -- and this is another step towards keeping people
engaged no matter where they are."
Facebook promised
that WhatsApp would remain independent and said it served a real-time
communication need, while Messenger was used more in the style of email
between members of the social network.
WhatsApp is
ideally suited to young people who increasingly prefer rapid-fire
smartphone messaging to making calls or churning out email. Facebook has
been eager to keep the devotion of young users who set trends and carry
tech habits into the future.
It is Facebook's biggest
acquisition and comes less than two years after the California-based
Internet star raised Sh1.37 trillion ($16 billion) in the richest tech
sector public stock offering.
Zuckerberg said that
WhatsApp -- a cross-platform mobile app that allows users to exchange
messages without having to pay telecom charges -- was worth the steep
price because its blistering growth around the globe has it on a clear
path to hit a billion users and beyond.
"Services with a
billion people using them are all incredibly valuable," Zuckerberg said
while discussing the purchase price during a conference call with
analysts.
The deal came from a chat Zuckerberg had with
WhatsApp co-founder Jan Koum, whom he described as a "valuable thought
partner" and friend of many years.
"Last Sunday
evening, about 11 days ago, I proposed if we joined together that would
help us really connect the rest of the world," Zuckerberg said.
"He thought about it over the course of the week, came back and said he was interested."
Silicon
Valley-based WhatsApp started the year with 50 employees, most of them
engineers, and the startup said that all of its stakeholders have
approved the take-over.
The purchase includes $12
billion in Facebook shares and $4 billion in cash. It calls for an
additional $3 billion in restricted stock units to be granted to
WhatsApp founders and employees that will vest over four years.
- 'Powerful capabilities' -
Koum,
who joins Facebook's board under the deal, said: "WhatsApp's extremely
high user engagement and rapid growth are driven by the simple, powerful
and instantaneous messaging capabilities we provide."
The tie-up gives WhatsApp "the flexibility to grow and expand," he added.
Zuckerberg
and Koum, who both took part in the conference call, did not discuss
details about WhatsApp revenue, saying the focus for the foreseeable
future would be on growth, not making money.
WhatsApp software is available for free, but after a year, users are asked to pay annual subscriptions of 99 cents each.
- Bubble fears -
The
acquisition represents likely the biggest-ever price for a tech
startup, trumping the Sh731 billion ($8.5 billion) paid for Skype --
which allows users to make voice and video calls over the Internet -- by
Microsoft in 2011.
"The size of this deal is really
massive and it will get people talking about a bubble," Greg Sterling at
Opus Research told AFP.
Sterling said the deal is a
risk for Facebook because "in social media, you have a flavour of the
month, and next year we might have another app with extremely rapid
growth."
"I think (the high price tag) comes from the
frustration of not being able to buy Snapchat, and then there is the
youth factor," Sterling added.
It remained unclear how Facebook planned to eventually make money from WhatsApp.
Roger
Kay at Endpoint Technologies said WhatsApp has become one of the most
popular mobile applications worldwide "because it allows you to message
anybody anywhere for free."
"It's not obvious how they
can get $12 billion out of this but it's been clear for a while that
WhatsApp is very interesting. It reminds me a little bit of Skype," Kay
said
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