It acquired Scientific-Atlanta, a maker of TV set-top boxes, in 2006 for $7.1 billion and online conference provider WebEx a year later for $3 billion. Brian Marshall, an analyst with ISI Group, said the deal makes sense for Cisco as it focuses on video offerings for service providers. NDS, which competes with Cisco, counts pay-TV operators such as DirecTV, Vodafone, Cox and BSkyB among its customers. NDS is jointly owned by News Corp. and private equity firm Permira. Its software helps cable and satellite TV companies deliver content to subscribers' digital video recorders, tablets, smart phones and other devices. It had filed documents as part of a planned initial public offering before agreeing to the deal with Cisco. Cisco is acquiring NDS' sites in Britain, Israel, France, India and China and is absorbing its 5,000 employees. The boards of both companies have approved the deal, and it's expected to close in the second half of this year. Marshall said that while the acquisition is a "good use of offshore cash" for Cisco, the company is paying a lot. He estimates that Cisco is paying about 25 times NDS's earnings, while Cisco's stock trades at about 10 times its earnings. BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis said video is a big priority for Cisco. While the company is not moving away from networking gear, growth in that area has stalled out to a degree and is now in the single-digits, he said. So, the company needs to find the next high-growth area, and that's video, he added.
Source: The NZ Herald, New Zealand
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