Cloud M&A is hot, and the cloud computing sector is booming. We have another big acqusition. CenturyLink this morning agreed to buy Savvis for $40 a share which puts the deal valued at $2.5 billion. Savvis has been a hot buyout target. I know folks at the company and they were deep in cloud infrastructure development.
Journey to the private cloud and Hadoop trends are changing the nature of the datacenter. Add fuel to the fire with the big Amazon implosion last week it’s not a surprise that we are seeing consolidation in the cloud infrastructure market. In January, Verizon cut a deal to buy Terremark for $1.4 billion. Then NaviSite got swallowed up for $230 million. Dave Vellante wrote up a good post on why Service Level Agreements are the key to cloud adoption and why many are failing and some are winning.
Here is my bottom line summary and notes on the deal:
Executive Summary
Continued consolidation in service provider/managed hosting space…CenturyLink paying $3.2b for Savvis. This deal is all about getting CenturyLink a deeper enterprise footprint right on the heels of the recent Qwest deal (closed 4/1). The combination of CenturyLink + Qwest + Savvis is a strong network and cloud story for the enterprise. All CenturyLink network customers were asking for cloud services and this brings it too them…”Cloud services all require massive network requiresments, this is an opportunity to mesh those together”. Savvis provides an imemdiate platform to address CentruyLink customer cloud need. The Centurylink hosting business will fall under the Savvis brand post-deal.
The financial backing of CenturyLink also allows Savvis to take business global (via existing footprint and cheaper cost of capital) and gives them much better leverage from a network standpoint. 90% of Savvis hosting customers took network services from them too. Now Savvis goes from a small networking player with good cloud story to a very big one with much greater economies, this lever is critical to cloud services down the road and a strategic control point in enterprise cloud adoption.
Notes
next step in transformation, recently has expanded offering into enterprise business (via Qwest), Savvis is next logical step, enables them to capture growth in managed hosting, cloud computing and colo businesses with global scale
Qwest + Savvis = more than 50% of revs comes from busienss customers
immediately accretive to company financials
accretive in first year after closing
improves revs growth by 75 bps
immediately accretive to EBITDA growth
cash and stock deal, total $3.2b value
implies 8.8x FY11 EBITDA
breakdown of payment = $30/shr cash + $10/shr of centurylink stock
Savvis will be separate business unit, stays in St. Louis…can now extend services to much broader base of customers
will operate Centurylink hosting business under Savvis brand
Savvis
HQ’ed in St. Louis
has become global leader in cloud, managed hosting and network services
2500 clients globally
2450 heads
enterprise class managed serviced
dedicated hosting
dedicated/shared clouds
security & storage
total $1b in revs in FY11
28% revs from networking
34% from managed services
rest from colo
managed hosting business growth +25%
primarily north american business focus
Earnings report (co not doing regular earnings call b/c of transaction)
revs growth better across all regions, lower than expected turn
colo pricing stable, $50/sq ft
pipeline for large deals remains strong, cloud driving interest in this area
total revs +19% y/y
managed svcs 48% of hosting revs, +31% y/y
colo revs $100m, 52% of overall hosting revs, +21% y/y
customers increasingly demanding cloud services with network purchases
migration to cloud services increasing rapidly
Savvis provides imemdiate platform to address customer cloud need
accelerating growth plans in this space
Q&A
different business model than Terremark, 33% of business fro SVVS is network related, very different valuation approach here vs TMRK
Qwest data center services will move under Savvis banner (16 Qwest data centers, none outside of US)
will be cross selling with sales teams
will attempt to have one point of contact for business customers
will bring network and IP guys in to complete the sale with each customer
one of major advantages of deal = increased scale for Savvis, market becoming very popular with major vendors, needed more scale and financial resources and backing to take this business globally
believe they can better leverage Qwest asset than previous
cheaper access to capital
network business – “this gives us expansion that we could have never had before, largest customer wants to do a lot more business
cloud services all require massive network requiresments, this is an opportunity to mesh those together
Legacy qwest business…avg revs/sq foot is $80 in colo space, on a monthly basis
90% of hosting companies take network from us and we are very small player in this space, Centurylink gives them huge leverage here
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