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Google sells Motorola to Lenovo for $2.91 billion

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Meltdown in the article comments tbh. I guess it makes sense for Google though.

Google sells Motorola to Lenovo for $2.91 billion
Lenovo will use Motorola's name to enter the US smartphone market

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Google is selling Motorola Mobility to Lenovo, giving the Chinese smartphone manufacturer a major presence in the US market. Lenovo will buy Motorola for $2.91 billion in a mixture of cash and stock. Google will retain ownership of the vast majority of Motorola's patents, while 2,000 patents and a license on the remaining patents will go to Lenovo. At the deal's closing, Lenovo will pay Google $660 million in cash and $750 million in stock, while the remaining $1.5 billion will be paid out over three years.

Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing said that although his company doesn't have "an effective plan yet," it has confidence that it can turn the currently unprofitable Motorola's fortunes around. Yuanqing stated that, with the acquisition of Motorola, Lenovo expected to sell 100 million smartphones worldwide.

GOOGLE BELIEVES LENOVO CAN TURN MOTOROLA INTO "A MAJOR PLAYER WITHIN THE ANDROID ECOSYSTEM."

"Lenovo has the expertise and track record to scale Motorola Mobility into a major player within the Android ecosystem," Google CEO Larry Page said in a statement. "This move will enable Google to devote our energy to driving innovation across the Android ecosystem, for the benefit of smartphone users everywhere."

Google initially bought Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion back in 2012, but it said at the time that it was mainly interested in the company's patent portfolio. Now, Google is offloading its subsidiary's handset business, which has been losing hundreds of millions each quarter since the purchase. Google will hold on to Motorola's ambitious Advanced Technology and Projects group, however, and it previously sold off Motorola's set-top box unit for over $2 billion.

Though patents are a large part of what drew Google's interest to Motorola in the first place, those patents haven't been as helpful as Google initially hoped. Google seems to have highly overvalued Motorola's portfolio, which hasn't been able to bring in nearly as much in royalties as either company seemingly expected. It also hasn't been able to use those patents very aggressively, seeing them fail when used in an attempt to block sales of the iPhone. The entire ownership of Motorola has been something of a headache for Google, and it appears that it's finally time for Google to cut its losses.

That's good news for Lenovo, which has been vocal about its intention to move into the US smartphone market this year. Lenovo hasn't made much headway with that until now. It made a bid for BlackBerry late in 2013, but its offer was ultimately blocked. Now, it'll see a much stronger start with the purchase of Motorola. Motorola actually marks Lenovo's second acquisition announcement this month: just last week it said that it had reached a deal to buy IBM's x86 server business.


The purchase of Motorola plays to Lenovo's experience in taking an established brand and building upon it. It purchased its ThinkPad business from IBM in 2005, and has gone on to create a continually successful line of laptops from it. Lenovo is certainly hoping to do the same with Motorola, which has consistently built strong devices but has often struggled against competitors with more marketing muscle.

"The acquisition of such an iconic brand, innovative product portfolio and incredibly talented global team will immediately make Lenovo a strong global competitor in smartphones," Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing said in a statement. "We will immediately have the opportunity to become a strong global player in the fast-growing mobile space."

"WE WILL BECOME A MUCH STRONGER NUMBER THREE SMARTPHONE COMPANY."

Both Lenovo and Google have high expectations for Motorola coming out of the acquisition. Motorola said the acquisition will help it to achieve the rapid growth it's looking for. "With the recent launches of Moto X and Moto G, we have tremendous momentum right now and Lenovo’s hardware expertise and global reach will only help to accelerate this," Motorola CEO Dennis Woodside said in a statement.

In an alleged email to employees, which has been leaked to TechCrunch, Page said that he believes Motorola will do better under a company that can fully commit to a focus on smartphones. "The smartphone market is super competitive, and to thrive it helps to be all in when it comes to making mobile devices," Page wrote. "It’s why we believe that Motorola will be better served by Lenovo."

On a conference call discussing the acquisition, Yuanqing said that Woodside and Motorola's existing management team would be staying on board. Yuanqing also said that he felt the two brands were complimentary, and that both the Motorola and Lenovo brand would remain in use where they were already strong. "A detailed plan will be made after we close the deal," Yuanqing said.

"WHY AM I SO CONFIDENT? I HAVE SEVERAL REASONS."

Despite Motorola's ongoing struggle to reach profitability, Yuanqing is extremely optimistic about what it will do under Lenovo. "Why am I so confident? I have several reasons." Yuanqing cites five: it will immediately make Lenovo a major smartphone company in the US and give it relationships with over 50 wireless carriers worldwide, Motorola is an established and respected brand, the deal includes important patents and licenses, it will help address new markets with a diverse smartphone lineup, and it brings along Motorola's expertise in mature smartphone markets.

Despite his intention to continue using the Lenovo name where it's strong, Yuanqing emphasized that the Motorola name would play a major role in its ability to compete in the United States and other major markets. "We had a similar opportunity with the Think brand, and we succeeded," Yuanqing said. He believes the acquisition will ultimately make Motorola a far stronger smartphone manufacturer, turning it into a capable competitor against the industry's giants.

"We will become a much stronger number three smartphone company," Yuanqing said, referencing Motorola's position as the third-place Android smartphone manufacturer in the US. "Motorola brings a strong brand, brilliant engineering, great products, [and] outstanding relationships with retailers."

News of Lenovo's acquisition of Motorola comes just a day before Google reports its quarterly earnings. Investors have been interested to know what Google plans to do about Motorola's mounting losses. Tomorrow may not deliver them good news from the previous quarter, but it appears that Google has given its final answer.

http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/29/5358620/lenovo-reportedly-buying-motorola-mobility-from-google
 

akhi216

I ain't sign up for that
There are always meltdowns in The Verge comment sections.

This can only be good for Motorola, Lenovo bought IBM's PC business and became the biggest PC manufacturer. I am more interested in the modular phone concept that Google would retain in the deal.

BTW, the deal hasn't been made yet, it still has to be approved by US and China authorities. ;)
 

Carlos

Owner
Staff member
This can only be good for Motorola, Lenovo bought IBM's PC business and became the biggest PC manufacturer. I am more interested in the modular phone concept that Google would retain in the deal.
When a company buys another company for the sole purpose of patent acqusition, they intend to use it in the future. Especially with whatever they have now (like the Android OS), and future OS'es.

If I was the C.E.O. of Google I would have kept "Motorola Mobility," I would have re-named it to Google Mobile, and use it as a manufacturer of my Android phones. So, I could profit off every single phone I sold, every Android OS I installed in each one of those, and then some more.

Now, Lenovo will probably do it, and become a stronger manufacturer of mobile technologies.
 

akhi216

I ain't sign up for that
Lenovo may have well bought themselves Motorola Mobility's devices division in what looked like a lightning quick deal, but the story apparently goes back a few years. According to TechCrunch, Lenovo was among the competitors bidding for Motorola back in 2011, but it obviously lost out to Google's $12.5 billion offer and more attractive brand cache.


Lenovo chairman and CEO, Yang Yuanqing, is cited in a WSJ report, corroborating the idea that this was long due. Apparently, the executive approached Google's Eric Schmidt after Google acquired Motorola in 2012, expressing Lenovo's continued interest in the symbolic handset maker:


"I told him if they really want to run a hardware business they could keep it," Mr. Yang told the WSJ. "If they are not interested in the hardware business, they could sell Motorola to us."


It's not at all surprising, then, that the Google chairman was the one to approach the Lenovo chief just before Thanksgiving in 2013, testing the waters. As we now know, Lenovo was obviously still quite interested, especially since rumors have it that it was in unsuccessful talks with BlackBerry not long before that. Mr. Yang was apparently quite enthusiastic, too: "And I said yes", he told the WSJ. "This was a longtime love story." This actually means that Lenovo has been looking for a shortcut to the global market pretty much as early as its smartphone division came into existence. This hopefully means that the Chinese giant is not messing around, and has been preparing for this moment for quite some time now.


But it's not a done deal just yet, at least as far as US regulators are concerned. The deal still needs to be approved, and it is likely to go through the scrutinizing gaze of the US Committee on Foreign Investment, a body that looks at transactions that it considers to entail potential national-security risks. Lenovo is said to be unconcerned, however.

http://goo.gl/7kVNB6

A rather important tidbit of info that wasn't available at the time that the article was made in the OP is that should the merger be approved, Google would be retaining Motorola's department that deals with the yet to be released modular phone concept in collaboration with Phonebloks:



With Google directly behind the modular phone concept it would take off a lot faster than if it was simply Google backing Motorola on the project.

Speaking of modular devices Razer is gauging interest in a modular PC:

 

Alexei Zadornov

Active Member
I didn't see this comming. However, I think this was always the reason why Google have bought Motorola Mobility. They only wanted the patents. Now, they are selling the hardware unit and keeping the patents.
 

Kamehameha

Well-Known Member
Interesting. Lenovo makes some quality products. I have a Lenovo tablet. Wouldn't mind seeing what they could do with a phone. Motorola had some good products, but overall I wasn't extremely fond of them.
 

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