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the daily courant

Inside Satya's Activision Play, Saylor's Bitcoin Bet, and the Wordle-ification of Media

 

Good afternoon, happy Wednesday, and thanks for reading The Daily Courant. Here's a look at what's new at Puck.

 

Today, Bill Cohan explores the Wall Street-approved, three-word philosophy behind both Satya Nadella's all-cash deal for Activision, and Michael Saylor's all-in bet on Bitcoin.

 

Then, below the fold: Brian Morrissey explains why Wordle became a media sensation—and how the media industry is becoming more like Wordle. 

michael saylor

The Jack Welch of Crypto?

Why didn’t Microsoft buy Activision with its near-all-time-high stock? Why did Michael Saylor convert MicroStrategy’s treasury reserves into Bitcoin? Perhaps it’s because, as Ray Dalio says, “cash is trash.”

bill

WILLIAM D. COHAN

In the near-zero interest rate environment that the Federal Reserve has imposed on us for more than a decade, a question vexing many of the most successful corporate executives is what to do with the cash building up on their balance sheets. Big Tech, no surprise, is sitting on the motherlode. Apple has $190 billion of cash. Alphabet, the parent company of Google, has a cash pile of $142 billion. Amazon has $79 billion in cash. Meta, formerly Facebook, has $58 billion. Microsoft, the second most valuable company in the United States, with a market value of $2.2 trillion, has a cash balance of $131 billion. Or it did, until last week, when the company announced that it would be using about $70 billion of it to pay for Activision Blizzard, its shiny, new gaming behemoth. 

 

It has not been fashionable in recent years for big companies to pay for big acquisitions using their own cash hordes. For starters, most companies don’t have enough cash on hand to expend on buying another company. And those that do have the cash often prefer to preserve that cash for other purposes, such as paying down debt, paying dividends to their shareholders or using it to buy back stock. Or to save it for a rainy day. Such decisions tend to ebb and flow depending on the economic cycles, of course, but after a 13-year bull-market, the biggest acquisitions lately have been done using stock, since the equity value of many companies is at or near all time highs (or was, until the ongoing correction kicked in). Why not use high-priced stock to make an acquisition, the thinking goes, since it may all be just so much funny money anyway? 


The use of stock as an acquisition currency is also usually tax-free until the beneficiary decides to sell it, whereas cash received is taxable. Activision C.E.O. Bobby Kotick, for instance, could receive around $600 million in cash—the value of his Activision stock plus a payment triggered by the change in control—followed by a whopping capital gains bill. Had Microsoft structured the deal in stock, Kotick wouldn’t face the tax man until he decided to sell the shares, giving him ample time to get his estate and liquidation strategy in order...

CONTINUE READING ON PUCK

FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT

cocktail

The New No. 2?

HBO Max had a rough launch. But in the span of several months, it has transformed itself into a credible Netflix challenger.

JULIA ALEXANDER

money bag

The Putin-Biden Chess Match

Notes on a crazy 36 hours, brinkmanship, Ted Cruz, and a bewildered Ukrainian premier.

JULIA IOFFE

ufo

Can Yuri Milner Cheat Death?

The inside conversation about Silicon Valley’s favorite charity, MacKenzie Scott, and Bezos’ latest effort to perfect his physique.

TEDDY SCHLEIFER

card

Wordle and the World It Made

In media, the new trend is the flight to scarcity. And the subscription reset impacting Netflix will soon descend on publishers, too.

BRIAN MORRISSEY

 
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