No, not yet. News that the publicly-traded DreamWorks Animation was
in discussions with Japan’s SoftBank broke last Saturday afternoon via Hollywood Reporter.
DreamWorks has refused to comment on the negotiations, saying, “We don’t comment on rumors and speculation.” DreamWorks’ board held an emergency meeting last Thursday to discuss the offer.
SoftBank also owns 1/3 of the Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group, a stake that is worth over $70 billion. SoftBank owns majority stakes in companies across a wide range of industries including data center operations (IDC Frontier), online gaming (GungHo Online Entertainment, Supercell), publishing (SB Creative) and financial services (SBI Group). The company also has investments in online companies including Yahoo Japan and Zynga.
DreamWorks has refused to comment on the negotiations, saying, “We don’t comment on rumors and speculation.” DreamWorks’ board held an emergency meeting last Thursday to discuss the offer.
What is SoftBank?
SoftBank, the Japanese company that is interested in purchasing DreamWorks, is a telecommunications and Internet conglomerate that ranked 135th on Fortune’s 2013 Global 500 list with revenues of nearly $67 billion. The company, which has a market cap of US$92 billion, acquired a majority stake in the US phone carrier Sprint Nextel in 2012.SoftBank also owns 1/3 of the Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group, a stake that is worth over $70 billion. SoftBank owns majority stakes in companies across a wide range of industries including data center operations (IDC Frontier), online gaming (GungHo Online Entertainment, Supercell), publishing (SB Creative) and financial services (SBI Group). The company also has investments in online companies including Yahoo Japan and Zynga.
How much did SoftBank offer DreamWorks?
SoftBank offered $3.4 billion for DreamWorks, or $32 a share. That’s signficantly higher than DreamWorks’ market valuation of $1.89 billion last week, when its stock price was trading around $22 a share. DreamWorks stock shot up to over $28 today.Will DreamWorks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg consider that amount to be enough?
Katzenberg has stated in the past that he thinks his company is worth at least as much as Pixar, which was purchased by Disney for $7.4 billion in 2006. But neither DreamWorks’ films nor its characters have shown the lasting power of Pixar’s beloved library. It’s hard to see how Katzenberg will achieve the same price that Pixar was able to command, but he may get close to the $4 billion that Disney paid for Marvel and Lucasfilm each.Why would SoftBank want to own DreamWorks?
Financial analyst Atul Goyal explained to the Wall Street Journal that:Such a deal would make sense for SoftBank because it would help the company expand its offering of media content, which now features mostly mobile games. As growth in smartphone penetration slows, mobile network operators like SoftBank, which owns one of the three main cellular carriers in Japan as well as Sprint Corp. in the U.S., will rely increasingly on content to attract customers.As part of its content strategy, SoftBank also attempted to purchase Universal Music Group from Vivendi last year. Their $8.5 billion bid was rejected.
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