• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Oracle Buys Hyperion Solutions for $3.3 Billion

    March 5, 2007 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Database, middleware, and application software powerhouse Oracle went on an acquisition hunt again last week, and captured Hyperion Solutions for $3.3 billion.

    The deal will only obliquely affect the i5/OS platform, since Hyperion’s business intelligence tools for Windows, Unix, and Linux platforms, which are called System 9 BI+ collectively, do not run on the platform. However, the Essbase multidimensional OLAP server that is at the heart of the System 9 BI+ tools has been available for more than a decade on the OS/400 and i5/OS platform through a licensing arrangement with ShowCase, which was acquired by BI tool maker SPSS in early 2001. What Oracle will do with the relationship with SPSS as it relates to Essbase/400 product and related tools, which are now branded under the ShowCase name, remains to be seen. Oracle’s recent acquisition of PeopleSoft and the backlash it received from customers using J.D. Edwards ERP suites–JDE customers on the iSeries and System i platform, who made up the big portion of the JDE installed base and the majority of maintenance revenues, balked at being pushed to Java and away from RPG–suggests that Oracle has learned to leave well enough alone. But we’ll have to see.

    The Hyperion products are a good fit for Oracle, which needs to bolster its tools for helping companies sift through mountains of information contained in their disparate databases. It is a wonder that IBM didn’t snap up the company, to be honest, since the product is in many ways as good a fit for Big Blue as it is for Oracle chairman Larry Ellison’s big aspirations in the enterprise software racket. ERP giant SAP will probably now be tempted to make a retaliatory strike, as will IBM–if either can beat the private equity firms to the punch. That latter is not a foregone conclusion, and SAP does not like to acquire companies if it can avoid it. With the stock markets of the world looking a little jumpy this week, you can bet that the rich people, foundations, and funds around the globe are looking for easily digestible, profitable, and flippable software companies like Hyperion to snap up. The real wonder is that private equity firms have not already eaten Hyperion. Since the middle of 2002, Hyperion’s stock has outpaced the broader U.S. stock markets by a factor of about 3.5. (Some of that was due to the announcement of the Oracle acquisition, of course.)

    Before the Oracle deal was announced, Hyperion had a market capitalization of about $2.5 billion; after the deal, that rose to $3.3 billion to coincide with the value Oracle placed on the company. Hyperion has grown from $492 million in sales in its fiscal 2002 (ended June 30) to $765 million in sales in fiscal 2006. Net income has more than tripled, but took a slight dip in 2006 from 2005 to settle in at just under $99 million. The company has nearly 2,900 employees and 600 partners, and is just down the road from Oracle in Santa Clara, California.

    That leaves BI software provider Cognos, which is based in Ottawa, Ontario, and which is slightly larger (over 3,500 employees and $877.5 million in sales in fiscal 2006 ended in February 2006), as a probable takeover target. Business Objects is the other obvious takeover target now that Oracle has started a run on BI tools makers; it is based in Paris, France, has around 5,200 employees and the very desirable Crystal Reports business. And, Business Objects, with a market capitalization of just $3.4 billion against sales of $1.25 billion, is a much better deal financially. All three vendors have been under competitive pressure and profits have suffered, so they might welcome being part of a much larger conglomerate. For that matter, SPSS, which offers statistical software for data analysis as well as BI code, is a pretty attractive target, with $261.5 million in sales in its most recent year and a market cap of $677 million.

    All four companies are profitable and growing. No way someone isn’t trying to buy them. This Oracle-Hyperion deal is just the beginning, and someone may yet come in and try to take Hyperion away.

    Oracle expects the Hyperion deal to close in April 2007, if Hyperion shareholders accept it.

    RELATED STORIES

    Hyperion and Microsoft to Link BI Wares

    IBM, Hyperion, and SPSS Part Ways on DB2 OLAP Server

    SPSS Boosts OLAP Performance with ShowCase Suite 7.0

    Hyperion Buys Brio, Glimpse of BI’s Future Provided

    SPSS Reaffirms Commitment to ShowCase, OS/400 with New Release



                         Post this story to del.icio.us
                   Post this story to Digg
        Post this story to Slashdot

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 16, Number 9 -- March 5, 2007

    Sponsored by
    Maxava

    Maxava Webinar: Modern High Availability for IBM i: Beyond Legacy Replication

    If you are reassessing your current HA strategy, evaluating alternatives, or planning for the next phase of your IBM i platform, this session will help you understand why replication alone is no longer the benchmark for availability, and what modern high availability should deliver instead.

    Register Now

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    IBM Offers System i5 Shops Single Sign-On Services Magic Software Ekes Out a Profit in Q4

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

TFH Volume: 16 Issue: 9

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • COMMON Extends Deadline for 2007 System i Innovation Awards
    • IBM Tosses Google Gadgets Into WebSphere Portal
    • Magic Software Ekes Out a Profit in Q4
    • Oracle Buys Hyperion Solutions for $3.3 Billion
    • IBM Offers System i5 Shops Single Sign-On Services
    • COMMON Extends Deadline for 2007 System i Innovation Awards
    • The X Factor: How Many Servers, How Much Juice, How Much Money?
    • Midrange Boxes, Big Iron Drive Server Growth in Q4 2006
    • System i Marketeer Chats with iSociety Members
    • What’s IBM Cooking Up for RPG and the Web?

    Content archive

    • The Four Hundred
    • Four Hundred Stuff
    • Four Hundred Guru

    Recent Posts

    • IBM Taps Nvidia GPUs For AI-Turbocharged Data Mart
    • Izzi Partners With Capricorn For IBM i Services And Bluehouse For Software Peddling
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 28, Number 12
    • What Is Your Plan For Offsite Data Protection?
    • What Is Threatening IBM i Security Now
    • GiAPA Tracks SQL Performance Issues On IBM i
    • LegacyBridge Uses AI To Automate Data Entry On 5250 Screens
    • As I See It: The Surgical Years
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 28, Number 11
    • We Need To Get A Little Insight From You

    Subscribe

    To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

    Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Contributors
    • Four Hundred Monitor
    • IBM i PTF Guide
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe

    Search

    Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle