Priceline.com Inc said it will buy
Kayak Software Corp in a friendly deal valued at $1.8 billion, bolstering its
travel research and advertising capabilities.
Priceline
is offering $40 a share for Kayak, a 29 percent premium to the company's
closing price of $31.04 on Thursday. It expects to pay $500 million in cash and
$1.3 billion in equity.
Kayak,
which offers a website and mobile applications to help consumers compare prices
for airlines, hotels and rental cars, went public in July with shares priced at
$26. It operates like a search engine, letting consumers compare pricing along
with other websites such as Priceline.com rivals Expedia Inc and Orbitz
Worldwide Inc.
Dan Su, a
Morningstar analyst, said there is concern that Priceline's rivals would likely
not want to continue advertising on Kayak once the acquisition is completed.
Priceline,
which is known for its name-your-own-price auction and has the largest market
capitalization among online travel agencies, owes much of its success to
international bookings on its popular European travel site Booking.com. But it
has cited concern in recent months that weakness in Europe could slow growth.
"This
certainly represents an investment for them in the paid-search, or the
advertising channel, which is not an area where they've historically had a lot
of exposure," said Daniel Kurnos, an analyst with Benchmark Co.
He said
Orbitz stood to be affected by the deal, as Kayak is a significant driver of
its traffic.
Kayak
shares jumped 27 percent to more than $39 in extended trading, while
Priceline.com fell about 1.7 percent to $617 from its Nasdaq close of $627.87.
Jeffery
Boyd, Priceline.com President and Chief Executive, told analysts during a
conference call that Kayak, which gets more than 100 million user queries each
month, had built a leading position in mobile applications.
"We
are excited at the prospect of Kayak building a global brand in travel
planning, which we believe holds a significant financial opportunity for the
group," Boyd said.
Kayak will
be operated independently under the leadership of its current management, which
includes company cofounders Steve Hafner and Paul English, Priceline said.
The deal
is expected to close late in the first quarter of 2013.
Kayak
reported third quarter results after markets closed on Thursday. It had net
income of nearly $8 million, or 19 cents a diluted share, up 14 percent from $7
million, or 18 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue rose about 29 percent to
$78.6 million.
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