Microsoft On A Buying Spree With $130B Cash On Hand
- By The Financial District

- Feb 18, 2022
- 2 min read
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is on a major shopping spree. The company's planned purchase of video game maker Activision Blizzard, with a price tag of nearly $70 billion, is Microsoft's biggest and boldest acquisition. But it's hardly the only notable deal in the Nadella era, Paul R. La Monica reported for CNN Business.

Photo Insert: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is on a buying spree
Microsoft scooped up advertising tech business Xandr from CNN owner AT&T late last year for a reported $1 billion. The company also shelled out nearly $20 billion for cloud software firm Nuance earlier in 2021.
That's on top of numerous other billion-dollar deals Microsoft has made since Nadella took the helm in 2014, including the acquisitions of Minecraft developer Mojang, Bethesda games studio owner ZeniMax Media, open-source coding site GitHub and business social media network LinkedIn. The LinkedIn deal was previously Microsoft's largest, with a value of $26.2 billion.
Now there are reports Microsoft is looking to buy Mandiant, the cybersecurity software firm formerly known as FireEye that is currently valued at about $4.5 billion. Mandiant CEO Kevin Mandia said on the company's earnings conference call with analysts last week that it won't comment on rumors or speculation.
It should come as no surprise that Microsoft might be looking to use some of the massive amounts of cash it has on its balance sheet to close some deals. Microsoft has about $130 billion, and would still have around $60 billion left over after the Activision deal closes...assuming it is approved by regulators.
The cybersecurity business is a major area of focus for Nadella. Last year, Microsoft bought several security startups, including CloudKnox Security, RiskIQ, and CyberX. Security is a lucrative business for Microsoft since it generates a large chunk of recurring annual subscription revenue.
It also helps Microsoft attract more corporate customers for its other numerous, cloud-based subscription software offerings.
Microsoft isn't the only tech company on the hunt for deals. With interest rates likely headed higher over the next few months, other cash-rich tech firms may be propelled into action. Two others already have.
Intel announced Tuesday that it was buying Tower Semiconductor for $5.4 billion in cash. IBM said Tuesday it was purchasing Neudesic, a cloud services consulting firm. And there are reports that Cisco Systems (CSCO) has made a $20 billion offer for Big Data firm Splunk.
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