Home Industry Technology Microsoft to acquire Activision Blizzard in $69bn cash deal Microsoft is offering a 45 per cent premium to Activision’s last closing price in New York by Bloomberg January 19, 2022 Microsoft Corp. is spending $69bn on the biggest cash-funded takeover since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, with its purchase of Activision Blizzard. The US technology giant is paying up for Activision, owner of the Call of Duty franchise, after video-game makers got a boost during extended Covid-19 lockdowns. There hasn’t been an all-cash acquisition this big since energy giant Saudi Aramco took control of chemical producer SABIC in a $69bn deal announced in 2019, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It’s been a busy start to the dealmaking year, with transaction volumes already up 41 per cent over the same period last year to hit $218bn. That comes even after a record 2021, when more than $5 trillion-worth of deals were announced, trouncing the previous high set more than a decade earlier. When Candy Crush and CoD become your actual job. Microsoft x Activision Blizzard. ?❤️?https://t.co/nw4cLoaoTB pic.twitter.com/QPGt9DC2jF — Microsoft (@Microsoft) January 18, 2022 Just three weeks into 2022, the boom is showing no signs of slowing down, with Unilever’s $68bn approach for GlaxoSmithKline’s consumer health unit adding to the tally of potential mega deals. The Activision purchase ranks as Microsoft’s biggest ever acquisition, surpassing its $26bn takeover of professional social network LinkedIn Corp., announced in 2016. Microsoft is offering a 45 per cent premium to Activision’s last closing price in New York. That tops the average 24 per cent premium paid by buyers of video game producers and other entertainment software companies over the past five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Together with @ATVI_AB, we will usher in a new era of gaming that puts players and creators first and makes gaming safe, inclusive, and accessible to all. https://t.co/fF2Ig3gSfx — Satya Nadella (@satyanadella) January 18, 2022 Buying Activision will eat away at a big chunk of Microsoft’s cash pile, which stood at $131bn at the end of September. Few companies have the balance sheet to pull off such a deal. Microsoft is just one of two publicly traded companies to earn top triple-A ratings from both Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings, the two biggest credit graders, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Johnson & Johnson is the other. Moody’s upgraded Apple’s long-term credit rating to the highest level last month. Tags Activision Blizzard microsoft 0 Comments You might also like OpenAI in talks to raise new funding at $100bn valuation Microsoft, OpenAI tie-up comes under antitrust scrutiny COP28: Microsoft’s Naim Yazbeck on leveraging data, tech to drive sustainability UPDATE: Sam Altman to join Microsoft after OpenAI exit