In keeping with our mission to provide comprehensive advertising analysis, MediaRadar puts together a report of the most important mergers and acquisitions news each week. Stay in the loop, whether you sell advertising space or focus on business development.
This week, Forbes expands its revenue streams with an analytics investment, Viacom and CBS remerge to stave off stiff streaming competition, and Richard Branson drops his plan to sell his majority stake in Virgin Atlantic.
Forbes Media has purchased a majority stake in stock prediction tool, Quantalytics AI Labs, formerly known as Quantamize.
Quantalytics utilizes artificial intelligence to analyze and forecast stock performances. This acquisition comes almost one year after Forbes celebrated its most profitable year in a decade.
The actual figures were never publicized, but CEO Mike Federle claimed 2018 brought revenues up by more than 18 percent as profits increased by 42 percent. Forbes, which is owned by Integrated Whale Media Investments, a Hong Kong-based investment company, plans to incorporate predictive insights from its new analytics toy in their reporting, delivering it to their 94 million monthly unique visitors and 45 million social media followers.
The acquisition of Quantalytics is just one step in a broader business strategy for Forbes to diversify their revenue avenues. Last year, the media organization also acquired The Memo, a British online business publication.
Viacom and CBS have re-merged to create the entertainment industry’s newest conglomerate, operating the studios of Paramount Pictures; cable channels like Showtime, BET, Nickelodeon, MTV, VH1, TV Land, The CW, and Comedy Central; and the major publishing house, Simon & Schuster.
While the final cost of the transaction was not disclosed, previous releases valued the deal at up to $15.4 billion.
The on-again, off-again relationship between the two companies started when they first merged in 1999, then broke up in 2005, and are now back together as ViacomCBS. This reunion speaks to the philosophy that the two entertainment entities are stronger together, as they compete against internet companies including Amazon and Netflix. They intend to take on the streaming giants by beefing up their own streaming service, CBS All Access. The platform will offer 14 original shows, including Star Trek: Discovery, The Good Fight, Why Women Kill, and The Twilight Zone.
According to Bloomberg, British billionaire Richard Branson is dropping his plan to sell part of his airline company Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. to Air France-KLM Group. Branson will keep his 51 percent majority stake in the company.
His plan, which was announced two years ago, would sell a 31 percent stake in his airline company for around $284 million. The original plan was to set up a revenue and cost sharing three-way venture between Branson, Air France, and Delta Air Lines, which already owned a 49 percent stake.
Although the sale will not move forward, the original revenue and cost sharing pact will still hold, according to people familiar with the negotiations. A final agreement between Virgin Atlantic and Air France should be reached in the weeks to come.
These are some other notable deals and developments from the past week: