Twitter Inc has initiated talks with several technology companies to explore selling itself, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday, as the social media company grapples with its slowest revenue growth since going public in 2013.
Twitter
has struggled to translate its high public profile into the kind of user growth
that has propelled Facebook, which now boasts 1.71 billion customers. The
company has also suffered from management turmoil since its earliest days.
CNBC
reported earlier on Friday, citing anonymous sources, that Twitter is in talks
with companies that include Alphabet's Google and Salesforce.com, and may
receive a formal bid soon.
Twitter
and Alphabet could not be reached immediately for comment. Salesforce declined
to comment.
Twitter
shares jumped more than 20 percent to $22.46 per share on Friday on the report
of sales talks, marking the largest one-day rise since their first day of
trading in 2013.
Twitter,
which now has a market value of nearly $16 billion, has been a near-constant
focus of takeover speculation amid persistently disappointing sales and user
engagement.
Morningstar
analyst Ali Mogharabi said Alphabet would be the best acquirer for Twitter
since it has not yet been able to crack social media on its own despite several
efforts.
“From a
strategic standpoint, we think from it would be more beneficial for Alphabet as
opposed to Salesforce,” Mogharabi said.
Morningstar
estimates Twitter could be bought for $22 per share.
As
rivals such as Facebook's Instagram and Snapchat gain traction with advertisers
and social media users, investors have questioned how long Twitter could
persist as a stand-alone company.
Co-founder
Jack Dorsey returned to the company as chief executive in 2015, but his plan
for reviving Twitter is at best seen as unfinished.
The
company has struggled to generate revenue growth and profits, despite having
some 313 million average monthly active users and a growing presence as a
source of breaking news. It grew its user base by less than 1 percent in the
second quarter.
Twitter
missed Wall Street's sales expectations in both the first and second quarters
of this year, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine, and has yet to produce a
net profit in 11 quarters as a public company. As of the end of the second
quarter, the company has an accumulated loss of nearly $2.3 billion since its
inception.
As a
result, Twitter shares have struggled to retain their brief upward momentum
following the company's highly anticipated initial public offering in November
2013 at $26 a share.
The
shares peaked above $74 just over a month after its IPO, but have been on
steady downward trajectory since. From then through Thursday's close at $18.63,
the stock had lost three-quarters of its value.
Agencies
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