The Real Story is here !
In one of the biggest technoloy deals of the past decade, Facebook
agreed to buy WhatsApp for $16 billion to expand in the fast growing mobile
messaging market and pursue its goal of connecting as much of the world's
population as possible over the internet.
Facebook said it will pay $4 billion in cash and $12 billion in
stock for WhatsApp, a service that has 450 million monthly users and is adding
more than i million users a day.
"WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people.The services
that reach that milestone are all incredibly valuable, " Facebook CEO Mark
Zuckerberg said in a statmenet announcing deal
STORY: What is WhatsApp?
Zuckerberg has been trying to get
into the mobile messaging market for a while. The company offered to buy
Snapchat for $3 billion last year, but that messaging start-up spurned the
offer.
To close the WhatsApp deal, Facebook
offered an extra $3 billion in restricted stock units, a common type of equity
compensation, to WhatsApp founders and employees. These awards will vest over
four years. Jan Koum, WhatsApp's co-founder and CEO, also gets a seat on
Facebook's board of directors.
While dwarfed by Time Warner's
purchase of AOL at the height of the first dot-com boom, Facebook's $16 billion
deal ranks as the fourth-largest technology acquisition of the past decade,
according to Dealogic.
Zuckerberg paid so much for WhatsApp
because the 5-year-old start-up is at the forefront of a new breed of mobile
messaging apps that are becoming the main way smartphone users communicate with
each other, especially in fast-growing developing markets like Africa, India
and Southeast Asia.
Social networks like Facebook are
currently the dominant way to keep in touch online, but that could change, and
Zuckerberg does not want to be left behind.
"Facebook is trying to get
involved in the new era of communication," said Ben Bajarin, principal
industry analyst at tech research firm Creative Strategies. "It has
shifted from social networking to these messaging services, which are becoming
new platforms in and of themselves."
Zuckerberg has a broader goal of
connecting most of the people on the globe through the Internet, and on
Wednesday he said that WhatsApp fits well with this long-term effort.
The Facebook CEO said he contacted
WhatsApp's Koum on Feb. 9 to suggest the two companies combine to pursue this
vision. Koum thought about it for roughly a week and expressed interest. Then
the two met to discuss the price of an acquisition and arrived at the deal that
was announced Wednesday.
"For the next several yeas, we
will focus on growing and connecting everyone in the world," Zuckerberg
said during a conference call with Wall Street analysts. "Once we get to a
service with 1 billion, 2, maybe 3 billion users one day ... then we can think
about ways to monetize."
Zuckerberg has been trying to
get into the mobile messaging market for a while. The company offered to buy
Snapchat for $3 billion last year, but that messaging start-up spurned the
offer.
To close the WhatsApp deal,
Facebook offered an extra $3 billion in restricted stock units, a common type
of equity compensation, to WhatsApp founders and employees. These awards will
vest over four years. Jan Koum, WhatsApp's co-founder and CEO, also gets a seat
on Facebook's board of directors.
While dwarfed by Time Warner's
purchase of AOL at the height of the first dot-com boom, Facebook's $16 billion
deal ranks as the fourth-largest technology acquisition of the past decade,
according to Dealogic.
Zuckerberg paid so much for
WhatsApp because the 5-year-old start-up is at the forefront of a new breed of
mobile messaging apps that are becoming the main way smartphone users
communicate with each other, especially in fast-growing developing markets like
Africa, India and Southeast Asia.
Social networks like Facebook
are currently the dominant way to keep in touch online, but that could change,
and Zuckerberg does not want to be left behind.
"Facebook is trying to
get involved in the new era of communication," said Ben Bajarin, principal
industry analyst at tech research firm Creative Strategies. "It has
shifted from social networking to these messaging services, which are becoming
new platforms in and of themselves."
Zuckerberg has a broader goal
of connecting most of the people on the globe through the Internet, and on Wednesday
he said that WhatsApp fits well with this long-term effort.
The Facebook CEO said he
contacted WhatsApp's Koum on Feb. 9 to suggest the two companies combine to
pursue this vision. Koum thought about it for roughly a week and expressed
interest. Then the two met to discuss the price of an acquisition and arrived
at the deal that was announced Wednesday.
"For the next several
yeas, we will focus on growing and connecting everyone in the world,"
Zuckerberg said during a conference call with Wall Street analysts. "Once
we get to a service with 1 billion, 2, maybe 3 billion users one day ... then
we can think about ways to monetize."
WhatsApp will stay an independent
company. But as a part of Facebook, it will be able to focus purely on growth
for longer, he added.
In the past, much of the spread of
the Internet happened on desktop computers. But now the majority of new
Internet users get connected through smartphones, which are expected to
outnumber PCs soon.
Messaging services, like Line in Japan,
WeChat in China and Kakao in South Korea, are the must-have apps for many of
these new smartphone users.
"There was a time 12 to 18
months ago in emerging markets when one of the primary reasons to get a
smartphone was to get on Facebook. That's not the case anymore," Bajarin
said. "These messaging apps are the reason now. Everyone is asking their
friends whether they are on these services.


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