Seth Gilbert, 12-22-2008
In June of 2007, private equity firm Elevation Partners announced they were committing $325 million and several experts, including iPod guru Jon Rubinstein, to turn Palm’s floundering ship around. Palm’s CEO Ed Colligan predicted it would take about 18 months to chart the course. Time’s about up. It’s now been a year and half. 18 months, and many bad earnings cycles (including consecutive losses), have passed and the company’s inching up on the release of a new smartphone platform (dubbed “Nova”). With losses mounting, it’s an all or nothing gamble. A big move to redefine the brand and reclaim prominence. Some question whether, in a down market, it will be enough even if Palm scores perfect. Some of the same wonder if it is too little too late to save the brand and restore the company. Palm’s biggest private investors aren’t among them. Today, Elevation Partners committed another $100m.
Elevation’s one hundred million will buy them voting rights equal to about 11%. Combined with their prior purchase, it will give the private equity firm 38% of Palm’s outstanding vote (on a converted basis).
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Seth Gilbert, 12-19-2008
There’s an old saying that says if you owe a bank a thousand dollars they own you but if you owe them a billion, you own them. While the numbers in the saying vary, today, media mogul Sumner Redstone seems to have validated the theory of the adage: if you owe enough, you’re in control.
Redstone’s National Amusements, the controlling shareholder of CBS Corp and Viacom Inc, had $800m out of a total $1.6b in debt obligations due to be repaid Friday. The bill wasn’t paid. Instead, the 15 lenders provided National Amusements an indefinite extension, the New York Post reported.
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Seth Gilbert, 12-18-2008
Over the past year, in an effort to establish exclusive, long term multiple-rights partnerships (so called “360” deals) with select A-list artists, Live Nation has dangled generous advance payments and equity as bait. Some of music’s biggest names bit in to the lure. Madonna, and Jay-Z, Shakira, Nickelback and U2 all signed up. Now, it seems a couple of the deals may have been even more generous than Live Nation intended. SEC filings indicate U2 will be the first to cash in.
U2’s next studio album, “No Line on the Horizon,” is officially slated for a March 2nd release. The band’s promotional and touring partnership with Live Nation won’t really pick up steam until then. Still, before the revenue starts running, nearly $25mllion is going U2’s way now.
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Seth Gilbert, 12-16-2008
UK Gamemaker SCi Entertainment Group outbid Elevation Partners to acquire Eidos Interactive in 2005. Less than two weeks ago, SCi filed papers to officially change their company name to Eidos – aligning the corporate name with their consumer face. If ongoing trade rumors are any indication, however, there may be little need to rush out and print new letterhead. Recent rumors have been circling that SCi/Eidos is on the block and the list of potential suitors includes EA, Ubisoft, Square Enix and Warner Brothers. Other bigger game companies could be interested too. Is there truth in the grapevine?
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Seth Gilbert,
With Digital Rights Management (DRM) there’s a constant cat and mouse game at play. Companies spend money to restrict their product’s use, hackers spend time trying to set it free. Recently, in two different battles from the same war – both sides scored victories. For the hackers, a group called the iPhone Dev-Team is reporting they’ve unlocked the iPhone 3G. For the content industry, the Blu Ray DRM standard BD+ has taken back some ground.
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Seth Gilbert, 12-15-2008
Last April, in a surprise announcement, Lions Gate, Viacom (Paramount) and MGM announced plans to launch their own, then unnamed, premium cable channel and video on demand service. Soon after, Business Week reported former Showtime exec Mark Greenberg was set to take the helm. Besides those two tidbits of information, there’s been speculation (including talk of Blockbuster joining the group) but limited detail. In November, a 10Q filing revealed the first small peek into project, specifically, detail on some of its costs. Now, another tiny piece of info has snuck out: its name.
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Seth Gilbert, 12-12-2008
Despite sickness in the economy and with individual companies in the sector like EA and Midway (more here), the broader video game industry’s retail heartbeat is pulsing strong and steady. For the second month in a row, NPD Group’s retail survey shows above average health.
Year over year, total sales for November were up 10% to $2.91b. Hardware and software categories saw near equal growth with software up 11% and hardware up 10%.
The sales results were easily good enough to best analyst projections predicting sales gains in the range of 5% to 7%. Impressively, if adjusted to normalize for the different number of post-Thanksgiving sales days between the two years (Thanksgiving was Nov. 22, in 2007, and Nov. 27 this year), they’d have been even better.
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