TEK2day

Operating at the Intersection of Technology and the Capital Markets

Scale Matters in Tech

Scale matters in Tech. This has never been more true as businesses increasingly go global.

Consider Netflix’s $13 billion content investment in 2018. Amazon and its Borg-like Prime service is also a significant content player. To round out the “Big 3”, consider Disney and its ESPN+ SVOD (“subscription video on demand”) service as well as Disney’s forthcoming Disney+ SVOD service. With the above as backdrop, imagine it’s 2015 and you are AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson. Yourself and the Board are contemplating whether to pursue HBO – which at the time was the original content crown jewel. It’s now 2019, AT&T has acquired HBO/Time Warner and HBO is no longer the crown jewel but a sub-scale content asset. How quickly times change. Sure, HBO/Time Warner content may provide AT&T with an edge over Verizon, Sprint/T-Mobile and enable AT&T to catch-up with Comcast/Universal. However, where to go from here? There is no scenario in which AT&T catches-up to the Big 3. Therefore, how much capital do you allocate to the content business over the next 3-5 years if you’re AT&T? How do you think about global distribution and how may distribution change over the next 3-5 years?


Moving to Enterprise/ Infrastructure Software, consider the case of IBM which has placed a significant bet on Cloud Services. Late to the cloud game, IBM trails Amazon’s AWS unit (the enterprise cloud pioneer), Microsoft Azure and Google. To play catch-up, last year IBM announced a $34 billion (63% premium) acquisition of Red Hat. Too little too late. IBM remains a sub-scale “cloud” player and does not have the balance sheet to invest at the same rate as AMZN, MSFT or GOOG. The $34 billion would have been far better deployed years ago in pursuit of high margin Information Services companies such as CoStar (tkr: CSGP), IHS Markit (tkr: INFO), Solera (pvt.) and Verisk (tkr: VRSK), that could have provided IBM meaningful scale in specific verticals. Further, the data generated by those Info Services companies could have provided grist for the mill – i.e. data for IBM Watson to analyze and productize.

So what’s the moral of the story? The top 2-3 players in a given market typically capture 80% of that market. Therefore, if you can’t be the number 1, 2 or 3 player in a given market it may not be worth competing. The long-term ROIC equation may be better served by defining a new market, or competing in a different market where you may quickly capture a leadership position.