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Rumour : Google on verge of buying out Sirius - Click HERE to go to the original thread with graphics


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Rumour : Google on verge of buying out Sirius - Click HERE to go to the original thread with graphics
Scales
http://www.orbitcast.com/

A "high profile source" is saying that Google Inc. is on the verge of buying out Sirius Satellite Radio Inc., according to a blog posting on ClickZ News.

Hard to say anything else - as there's no other information - but the blog post does come from Zach Rodgers who's the Managing Editor for ClickZ (he's been with the company for over 6 years).

Just over a year ago, Google and XM inked a partnership to provide targeted ads to satellite radio subscribers. Is there a connection? Who knows, that's what makes "rumors" so much fun.

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That may be one way around the merger. It also might explain why Howard, and the news team, has been mentioning when their guests (like Hadyn Porter today) rank on Google Trends, http://www.google.com/trends
Scales
This was posted on google finance about the same time as the rumour was posted, about being the fastest growing technology company.

http://finance.google.com/group/goo...0f9b179b2116bbb

Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. Tops Deloitte's New York Technology Fast
50 Ranking of Fastest Growing Companies With 79,060 Percent Revenue
Growth Over Five Years

http://www.marketwatch.com/n.asp?g=...D1B5D53B55&d...
adam
Very speculative but nteresting, thanks.
casper36092
that could be a good thing since google has so much money.
Scales
More on the weekends rumour

http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2...tellite-of-love
Scales
More recent

http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/09/2...gle-and-sirius/

The Motley Fool is running a story on a rumor that Google is considering a takeover offer for US Satellite Radio provider Sirius.

The merger between Sirius and XM has yet to be approved by Federal Regulators and hence Sirius would become a takeover target if the merger failed. Google is still seeking more inventory for its Adsense for Radio program; hence buying Sirius would provide it with its own radio network from which they could sell advertising.

It would be easy to dismiss the rumor as being fanciful, and many already have, however any serious Google watcher knows that Google’s ambitions seem to have very little or no bounds. The advantages of Google acquiring Sirius from an advertising view point are obvious, and Sirius also streams a portion of its content over the web as well; a service that would bring Google into internet radio broadcasting. However, there is one additional factor that isn’t being discussed much: Sirius’ Loral FS1300 satellites.

Sirius’ current three elliptical orbiting Loral FS1300 satellites are being primarily used for streaming the Sirius Radio service, but are planned to be used for streaming television as well. More importantly: they can push data two ways; the Loral FS1300 satellite being used by may other companies for that very purpose. In buying Sirius, Google would own 3 orbiting satellites (with one spare and one being built) which they could use to provide internet access or a related data service to the United States and Canada. Google + Sirius would equal Google being everywhere over the largest market in the world. Capacity may dictate a non-universal use for the satellites (such as providing an ISP service), but they could work for an in-car internet service or similar mobile function. Bringing highspeed, low cost internet access to the car has long been dreamed about, Google could be planning to do just that.
Scales
http://www.fool.com/investing/high-...-be-sirius.aspx


It's a silly rumor. Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is buying Sirius (Nasdaq: SIRI)? Really? Is a legacy air carrier or a Michigan automaker next on Google's shopping list?

I'm a fan of both Google and Sirius. I am. The problem is that this feels more like a comedy shop's chattering teeth than legitimate rumor-mill chatter.

The speculation started a few days ago, when ClickZ blogger Zachary Rodgers unleashed a zinger of a baited hook.

"A high-profile source is pretty convinced ol' Goog is on the verge of snapping up Sirius Radio," he wrote. "Heard anything of the sort? Do get in touch."

In touch? With reality? Since then, WebProNews, Blogging Stocks, and Seeking Alpha have all chimed in on the matter. No one seems to be taking it seriously, but they haven't spelled out the reasons why the chances that this will happen are about the same as Britney Spears going on a world tour with Sanjaya.

That's what I'm about to do, but first let me start with the other side of the argument.

Google's got a volume knob
I have no doubt that Google could improve the monetization process at Sirius. There are certainly areas where the two would come together like peanut butter and grape jelly.

Really.

Early last year, Google acquired dMarc Broadcasting, a provider of automated radio ads for the broadcasting industry. Beyond the commercial-free music channels, Sirius has some great ad-backed programming. As fate would have it, ad revenue per user is surprisingly slipping at Sirius. A purchase by Google would help.
Sirius is rolling out backseat video, a premium service that lets car owners stream up to three channels of kid-geared content. Google's push to video ads would come in handy here. A "best of YouTube" channel would be a low-cost programming opportunity to attract older backseat riders.
Both Sirius and XM (Nasdaq: XMSR) allow subscribers to stream select programming online. That means more Web traffic and a greater opportunity for paid-search market leader Google to wow us with its impressive wingspan.
A full 99% of Google's revenue comes from online advertising. Diversifying into the steadier flow of subscription revenue would help. I know -- if it's not broken, why fix it? But it's going to be a long way down for Google if the interactive marketing starts to get wobbly knees.
Pretty picture, isn't it? Now hit the delete button and flush out your eyes. It's just not going to happen.

The wedding invitation that never arrives
Forget for a moment that Sirius has been engaged to XM for more than seven months now. Any potential hookup of Google and Sirius is clearly intended as a rebound, just in case regulatory forces block the proposed pairing of the satellite-radio powers.

There are several other reasons to hold off on eyeing the bridal registry or booking a wedding singer.

dMarc's client base consists of mostly terrestrial radio stations. They view Sirius as a mortal enemy, hence the money spent by the National Association of Broadcasters in lobbying against the XM-Sirius combination. Google would kiss the terrestrial business goodbye in pursuit of the thinner sliver of radio ad revenue available on satellite radio? Impossible.
I am a believer in Sirius as an investment. I have no problem telling you that Sirius will be worth more in a few years. However, the market isn't that confident. It would view a purchase by a high-margin Internet growth company like Google of a low-margin, deficit-saddled company like Sirius as a desperate sign. Google and its $176 billion market cap would likely shed more than Sirius' entire $5 billion market cap if a deal were announced.
Regulators are already giving Google a hard time over its real-life purchases, such as the $3.1 billion deal pending for DoubleClick. Buying Sirius doesn't seem like a competition-stifling move on the surface, but it would be too beefy to ignore.
If Google were to buy a satellite-radio company, XM would be the better play. XM can be had for less yet offers a larger subscriber base and a wider range of ad-centric programming.
Don't get me wrong. I can definitely see Google and Sirius striking up the kind of broad marketing alliance that would flesh out many of the benefits that I first pointed out. If Google doesn't take the plunge, Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) or Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) will. That is reason alone for Google to work on its Mel Karmazin handshaking skills.

But a deal? An actual merger? Ha! Wind up the chattering teeth, load up the boardroom seats with whoopee cushions, and give Mel a joy-buzzer for that handshake.

It's just not going to happen.
Scales
http://www.bloggingstocks.com/2007/...ns-sirius-siri/

Will Google (GOOG) buy Howard Stern's Sirius (SIRI)?
Posted Sep 25th 2007 8:45AM by Peter Cohan
Filed under: Deals, Rumors, Google (GOOG), XM Satellite Radio (XMSR), Sirius Satellite Radio (SIRI), Marketing and advertising

WebProNews reports on a rumor that Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) is proposing to take over Sirius Satellite Radio (NASDAQ: SIRI). This rumor originated with Zachary Rodgers on ClickZ who posted: "A high profile source is pretty convinced ol' Goog is on the verge of snapping up Sirius Radio."

While such a merger would benefit Google, which is looking for a satellite outlet for its dMarc/AdWords radio advertising technology, there is little likelihood that Sirius would cooperate. After all, it's trying to get approval to merge with XM Satellite Radio Holdings (NYSE: XMSR).

I think this rumor is amusing, and if Google wants Sirius to use its technology to serve radio advertisements, it could just wait until after the merger and try to sell it to the new company. It's hard to see why buying a money losing company for, say, $5 billion just to sell it some technology would generate a positive return for Google shareholders.

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