http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200504/s1348167.htm
Wow, now that may or may not be a good thing :SAdobe to acquire Macromedia
Adobe Systems has announced plans to buy rival software firm Macromedia for about $US3.4 billion, a move aiming to propel the group into digital markets that include mobile phones.
Under the terms of the deal, which has been approved by both boards of directors, Macromedia stockholders will receive 0.69 shares of Adobe common stock for every share of Macromedia common stock in a tax-free exchange.
Adobe, know for its Photoshop photo editing program and Acrobat document software, will expand its offerings with Macromedia, which develops design tools for building "rich media" or interactive applications.
The San Francisco-based Macromedia claims the top spot in the market for website design, with about one-third of the market, followed by Microsoft.
It also produces the Flash and Shockwave software used in many games and Internet applications.
Adobe said it is aiming at "an industry-defining technology platform" with the combination of its PDF (portable document format) software and Macromedia's flagship Flash multimedia platform.
"This combination is all about growth and it would certainly disappoint me if we can't grow faster than other software companies," Adobe chief executive Bruce Chizen said on a conference call with analysts and investors.
He will become chief executive officer of the combined group.
Adobe expects to see some cost savings as part of the deal, but Mr Chizen declined to to offer any specifics.
With Macromedia, Adobe is reaching an estimated 3 million web developers and can expect the size of its current market of graphic artists and marketing executives to expand by 60 per cent, Fulcrum Global Partners analyst Jamie Friedman said.
"In the end, it's the same idea ... to get those products on a computer or a set-top box or a gaming console or a cell phone," he said.
"The companies have grown up together."
Bringing the two companies together was a desire to fuel expansion into new markets, rather than cost savings, Adobe president Shatanu Narayen said,
Combined, the merger partners hope to dominate the potentially hot market for providing multimedia software for cell phones and other mobile devices.
"For us the real reason to do the deal was strategic," Mr Narayen said.
Macromedia's Dreamweaver program is the leading software for website design, ahead of a rival offering from Microsoft, and its Flash animation software is a favourite of designers and other creative professionals.
Adobe shares fell 5.89 or nearly 10 per cent to 54.77 while Macromedia rose 3.27 or 9.8 per cent to 36.72 in closing trade.
- AFP