Google buys DoubleClick for $3.1 billion from Hellman & Friedman
And then, about the time my friend left, DoubleClick lost its aging appeal and was a necessary evil. In April 2005, the company fetched $1.1 billion when it was taken private by Hellman & Friedman and JMI Equity. Since then, the firms have sold off bits of DoubleClick here or there for tidy, small profits. A few weeks ago, the whispers began: a bidding war for DoubleClick had begun, with Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) with their paddles raised highest, some said (yikes!) as high as $2 billion.
The return for Hellman & Friedman has been pegged at a whopping 800%, making this a huge success for them at the same time it concerns many web publishers, who can only worry that Google has now truly become all-powerful. Could it be that Google and Microsoft will soon be considered in the same light? Or will Google's good-guy image survive?
I'm sure little companies all over -- and the firms who fund them -- will treat this news with rejoicing, and vie to be the first knocking on Google's door to be the next outrageous sale.
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