EA going for sale?

Desmond

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According to this article :

Electronic Arts Inc. (Nasdaq:EA) is "quietly exploring" opportunities for it to be sold to private equity firms, according to a report by the New York Post.

The Redwood City, Calif.-based video game industry giant is talking to two private equity companies, according to the Post, which cited persons familiar with the matter.

One of the private equity companies is KKR & Co. L.P (NYSE: KKR) The other is Providence Equity Partners, a major shareholder in ZeniMax Media, an EA competitor that publishes video games produced by its subsidiaries, which include renowned development studios like id Software, creators of the "Quake" and "Doom" franchises, and Bethesda Game Studios, makers of "The Elder Scrolls" series and "Fallout 3."

One source told the Post that "it's early days" for any deliberation. But another claimed that EA has "made it known they'd do a deal at $20 a share."

Over the past year, EA's stock has fallen 37 percent. When news of a potential takeover broke from the original Post report on Thursday, however, the company's stock jumped 7.1 percent to $14.02 -- the greatest single increase for the company in the past six months.
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Like other video game publishers and software developers of its stature, EA has struggled in recent years as the global financial crisis and the industry's turn toward mobile and social gaming decreased demand for its products. Company leaders such as COO Peter Moore and Labels president Frank Gibeau have admitted that EA's intellectual property is inevitably turning more toward digital content and corresponding online and social media platforms to keep abreast of such rapidly evolving industry trends. Just Wednesday, for instance, the company announced that it was turning its history "Command & Conquer" franchise into a free-to-play platform rather than a stand-alone single-player game as originally planned.

With a 30-year history at the top of a publishing and distribution model that is currently eroding, EA is understandably having a harder time adjusting to a new model than a video game developer that was born into a social media framework, such as Zynga (Nasdaq: ZNGA) -- which recently announced its own plans to begin publishing non-free-to-play third-party content.

EA declined to comment.
 

Usui1811

uıɐƃɐ ʇou 'ʇıɥs ɥo
sad to hear, but cant be denied.. their industry have really gone down comparing to their grip on market few years back !
 
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