Google to spend $30 billion on buying foreign firms

This deal will also include buying of technology rights for foreign firms

Update: 2014-05-22 09:00 GMT

San Francisco: Google plans to spend as much as $30 billion of its offshore cash reserves on buying foreign companies or technology rights, it emerged on Wednesday. In responses to questions from the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the Internet titan said that the bulk of the money it is amassing outside the country is likely to be spent on acquisitions.

Google told regulators in a letter that ‘it is reasonable to forecast’ that it needs from $20 billion to $30 billion of its foreign earnings to pay to companies or technology in the years ahead. "We continue to expect substantial use of our offshore earnings for acquisitions as our global business has expanded into other product offerings like mobile devices where our competitors and business partners are no longer primarily US based multinationals," Google said in the letter, which was dated December of 2013.

Google said acquisitions would be a part of its overall growth strategy, and that the trend was for the sizes of deals to get bigger. Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group did not expect Google to go on an international buying binge any time soon, reasoning that the company may actually be keeping cash abroad to avoid getting slammed by taxes in the United States. "The real reason companies retain capital overseas is not to buy startups, it is to avoid taxes," Enderle said, noting that other tech giants including Apple and Microsoft are in similar positions. "Every company that has a multi-national position really has a problem bringing capital back here."

In 2013, Google spent about $1.4 billion on more than 20 strategic deals, including the $1 billion acquisition of Israel-based Waze. Google wrote that it tried to buy another foreign firm, which it did not name, in a deal that could have been valued between $4 billion and $5 billion. A year earlier Google spent $12.4 billion to buy Motorola Mobility, which it is now selling to Lenovo at a fraction of that price. Google told the SEC that about half of its revenue came from outside the US as of the end of last year.

"Our expectation is that users will be using our services and viewing our ads on an increasingly wide diversity of devices in the future, and thus our advertising systems are becoming increasingly device-agnostic,"stated the company.

Similar News