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Apple has a lot of cash on hand. $24.5 billion in fact, which is more than even Microsoft now. With it, Apple could buy a whole bunch of things. 24.5 billion things from the Dollar Store, for instance (at least in states that don’t charge sales tax). In one of the great turns of fortune, Apple could even buy computer maker Dell — in cash — as Apple 2.0 noted earlier today.

This must be particularly sweet for Apple because Dell founder Michael Dell famously said 11 years ago that he would shut down Apple and give the money back to its shareholders, when asked what he would do with the then struggling computer maker (this was before iPods, let alone iPhones).

Of course that’s just on paper. Dell’s market cap is $23.48 billion, if Apple actually wanted to acquire Dell (which you can be certain it doesn’t), it would likely take substantially more money. But there are several significant companies out there with severely sunken market caps due to the poor performance of the stock market recently.

Aside from Dell, with $24.5 billion in cash, Apple could now technically afford:

  • Yahoo, with its $17.53 billion market cap, and still have about $7 billion in cash left over.
  • Sun Microsystems, about seven times over, with its $3.38 billion market cap.
  • Sony (at least the part traded on the New York Stock Exchange) with its $21.54 billion market cap.
  • Netflix, which arguably competes with the Apple TV — about 20 times over.
  • Blockbuster, which arguably competes with no one anymore — nearly 100 times over.
  • Xerox, whose early experiments with graphical user interfaces (GUI) and the mouse influenced early Apple, about 4 times over.
  • SanDisk, which, like Apple, loves flash memory, over 10 times over.
  • PDA maker Palm, about 60 times over
  • NVIDIA (which makes Apple’s graphic chips), about 6 times over.
  • Chip maker AMD, over 12 times over.
  • Texas Instruments, with its $22.14 billion cap.
  • It could nearly buy BlackBerry-maker RIMM (one key iPhone competitor) with its $26.13 billion market cap.

ZDNet lays out some other possible acquisitions Apple could make among non-publicly traded companies including TiVo, Pandora, Last.fm (which CBS Interactive already owns) and Hulu (which NBC and Fox own).

TiVo and Pandora are interesting as both could complement or help areas of existing Apple businesses (Apple TV and iTunes respectively), but none seem particularly likely at this time. As are none of the above companies I laid out. Many of the companies know their stock prices are down temporarily, and their shareholders would likely demand a premium on the current stock price to close a deal. Instead, expect Apple to sit on its bags of cash snapping up smaller companies to bolster its future — like its purchase earlier this year of chip maker PA Semi — as it continues to rake in more money.

Reprinted with permission from VentureBeat. Story copyright 2008 VentureBeat Inc. All rights reserved.

Comments

Gee, Netflix and Blockbuster lose money. Sony ain't what it used to be. Sun no longer has a compelling business model. Some might argue for a leveraged buy out of Adobe, but AAPL has been slowly eroding ADBE by making superior products. Final Cut Pro essentially "did in" Adobe Premiere. Preview is MUCH better than Adobe Reader for most purposes. Photoshop could be targetted, easily.


Apple + TI would indeed be an incredible partnership. I don't see it happening, but what a fascinating concept. None of the other companies (except possibly Sony) make strategic sense to me on first view.


Why are people so hasty in spending Apple's cash?

The only reason that Apple should buy a company is because they can see that they will make money from the acquisition. This means that the company must fit into Apple's long term plans.

For instance, Apple should not acquire Adobe. Why? Because Apple is vigorously competing against Adobe's products. Apple wants to replace FLASH with H.264. Why? Becuse H.264 is technically a better product. Thus, it has more room to expand.

Apple wants to compete with Photoshop, too. The time has passed when a third party developer, however large, can dictate to Apple. Apple will simply move in slowly and take over their market.

Adobe has its hands full in producing a 64 bit version of Photoshop via Xcode. This was a result of a decision that Adobe made, years ago, to keep Photoshop in 32 bit Carbon API's, so that it could use the same code for Windows PC's. The result is that it will take years for Adobe to catch up. In the meantime, it will lose market share to Applications that are 64 bit Xcode code.

Apple has high cash reserves to tide it through rough times and most people assume that those tough times ahead, not now. If Apple saw a place to spend that money inside the company, they would do so.

Has the market hit bottom, yet? No. Then, waiting is appropriate, because even juicier deals will be available. Temporarily cash poor companies will be begging Apple to take them over to keep them from going belly up. That is how you get the best deal.

"Fortune favors those who wait"


They could probably buy the whole American auto industry at this point. :-) No seriously, they could do that, cancel all of the current models and come out with some Apple iCars. You know they would be sweet!


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