This Year Everything Starts to Grow Again: TomTom CEO
Don't Miss Out — Follow Bloomberg On
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
Recommended
Athens Stock Exchange Reopens After A Five Week Suspension
Greek Stocks Plunge Most in Decades as Market Reopens to Crisis
California Has a Plan to End the Auto Industry as We Know It
Tom Hayes
Former Libor `Ringmaster' Hayes Guilty of Manipulating Rates
Meet the American Professor Tied to Greece’s Plan B
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Share on Reddit
Share on Google+
E-mail
TomTom NV, the Dutch maker of navigation software and devices, is exploring options that could lead to a sale as mapping technology draws growing interest from potential buyers, according to people familiar with the matter.
TomTom is attracting companies and investors who were looking at Nokia Oyj’s maps business HERE, which it agreed to sell to German carmakers on Monday, the people said, asking not to be identified because the discussions are private. While the $2.5 billion Dutch firm is speaking to possible advisers, there is no formal process underway and TomTom may decide against pursuing a sale and instead focus on investments, they said.
Shares in TomTom rose as much as 11.2 percent to their highest intraday price since 2009.
TomTom and Nokia are among few groups with digital-map assets, which are sought after by companies ranging from technology firms to social networks and e-commerce providers to car manufacturers. On May 19, Amsterdam-based TomTom said it extended a licensing agreement with Apple Inc. for maps and related information.
“We’re not talking to anybody about a sale,” Richard Piekaar, a spokesman for TomTom, said.
A street map is displayed on the touchscreen of a TomTom GO 6100 personal navigation device (PND) at TomTom NV's headquarters in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on Monday, June 29, 2015
A street map is displayed on the touchscreen of a TomTom GO 6100 personal navigation device (PND) at TomTom NV's headquarters in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on Monday, June 29, 2015
Photographer: Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg
Connected Cars
While TomTom shares are up more than 80 percent this year, the company is still valued well below its all-time high closing price of 53.56 euros, reached in November 2007. It currently has a market value of about 2.3 billion euros ($2.5 billion).
Nokia on Monday announced the sale of its digital-map unit for 2.8 billion euros to BMW AG, Audi AG and Daimler AG, which will gain technology for connected cars that will eventually be the basis for self-driving vehicles.
The carmakers held preliminary talks with TomTom as an alternative to buying Nokia’s HERE unit, people with knowledge of the matter said.
“It sets a price for the strategic value of maps, which is more than TomTom’s entire market value including their telematics business and their consumer division,” Marc Hesselink, an analyst for ABN Amro Bank NV, said by phone. “Now that this goes to three carmakers, that means TomTom has an opportunity to gain market share at the other carmakers.”
Before the German carmakers won the auction, Uber Technologies Inc. also considered teaming up with Baidu Inc. and Apax Partners to bid for HERE, people familiar with the matter said previously. Microsoft Corp. has also considered buying a minority stake, they said.
Other companies that were interested in the business included a group comprising China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd., NavInfo Co. and Swedish buyout firm EQT Partners AB, as well as three U.S. private-equity firms: Hellman & Friedman, Silver Lake Management and Thoma Bravo, the people said.