What Might Have Been: Microsoft Almost Bought SAP
steveorama writes "This article from Bloomberg indicates that 'Microsoft Corp, the world's largest software maker, approached late last year about buying the German company, a combination that would have vaulted it to the biggest seller of software for business applications.'" The talks came out in advance of likely disclosure in the ongoing merger battle involving Oracle, PeopleSoft and the U.S. Department of Justice. An anonymous reader points to this article in the Financial Times, adding "Microsoft says the discussions were halted due to the complexity involved in the transaction and in integrating the two companies. A merger with SAP would be a profound break with previous Microsoft strategy, and would likely have raised eyebrows among regulators."
with the German anti-trust law, which are a wee bit more strigent than the US anti-trust law.
If it had happened, I think we might have seen Microsoft suffer the same fate as ma bell. Oh well, M$ will still have their day.
bash: rtfm: command not found
It seems pretty counterintuitive to me that a monopoly would be allowed to merge with anything, even a small company.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Pure bullshit.
.net crap in.
.net when the business market place has pretty much said J2EE is what we want.
MS want ERP vendors to think they almost acquired SAP. Then ERP vendors will think wow that could be us. How can we make ourselves more attractive to MS for buyout. I know, we'll program a bunch of
This gets vendors to try to play extra nice with
Of course, but is there an ERP package that isn't bloat-ware? The fact is that MS wants to get into the market and Bill has $50 billion burning a hole in his pocket. On first-look, it made sense for Bill to at least "kick the tires".
MS would have been tied up, defocused, defanged, and out of our hair for YEARS with this acquisition. Gates and Ballmer (unfortunately) were wise and disciplined to pass it up. Historically, most big-company mergers wind up losing value (witness Daimler-Chrysler, a $40B abortion). Still, it's a pleasant thought :-)
Does explain the SAPDB sale to MySQL a little more rationally though. That was one piece of baggage MS would not have tolerated.
I also suspect that WGIII and Uncle Fester took a hard look at the install base, evaluated their chances of actually converting some of the largest customers, overestimated it by at least double and still realized they'd be buying into supporting a product on competitive operating system platforms and databases for a basically a decade at least. Further noticed that many of these customers have ahem connections that they'd rather not mess with (it's rumoured that Haliburton is or was the largest single instance SAP system in the world, this appeared on a chart at one SAP conference and then disappeared for future appearances of the same presentation).
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SAP:
Market Cap: 51.18B
It would have cost them all their cash, but they'd have bought a company that works very much against all the way different than MSFT:
Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin