Amazon eyes data in $1.7bn iRobot acquisition deal
August 8, 2022738 views0 comments
By Grace Airhule
US tech giant Amazon.com Inc. on Friday announced plans to acquire iRobot Corp., the maker of the Roomba vacuum cleaner, in a $1.7 billion all-cash deal.
The announcement of the acquisition, Amazon’s fourth-largest ever, comes just two weeks after the tech giant said it would acquire primary care company One Medical for $3.9 billion. It bought Whole Foods for $13.7 billion and MGM for $8.45 billion.
iRobot makes robot vacuum cleaners, and Amazon will make money from selling those gadgets, but the real value, according to Bloomberg, “resides in those robots’ ability to map your house. As ever with Amazon, it’s all about the data“.
The iRobot deal signals Amazon’s large appetite for acquisitions amid the economic downturn and despite increasing U.S. antitrust scrutiny, reports GeekWire.
Amazon will acquire iRobot for $61 per share, about a 22 percent premium from the company’s stock price at market close Thursday. Shares of iRobot were up nearly 20 percent in pre-market trading Friday.
The deal also marks Amazon’s latest investment in the smart home. The company is working on its own home robot, Astro, which debuted in September, and has an array of smart home technology products such as Ring cameras and Alexa-enabled devices.
Amazon acquired Ring in 2018 for $1 billion, and bought mesh WiFi startup eero in 2019.
There are existing connections between Amazon and iRobot: Alexa can control Roomba devices already, and iRobot uses Amazon Web Services.
In addition to consumer robotics, Amazon is also developing robots for the company’s warehouses. Amazon earlier this year invested in Agility Robotics, maker of a bipedal warehouse robot called Digit. It acquired warehouse robot developer Kiva for $775 million in 2012.
Ken Washington, who leads the Astro team as Amazon’s vice president of consumer robotics, made it clear that the company would be expanding its family of home robots, speaking in a interview with at the company’s re:MARS conference in Las Vegas. However, it wasn’t apparent until now that the company would do that in part through a major acquisition.
“Astro is our first consumer home robot,” Washington said at the time. “It’s not going to be our last.”
With Astro, the company has embraced a vision for a multi-purpose home robot, able to conduct security patrols, dance, or deliver items to specific people around the house. iRobot has taken a different approach with Roomba as a single-purpose device.
Founded in 1990 by researchers from MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab, iRobot unveiled the Roomba in 2002. The company also sells robotic mops, air purifiers, and more.
iRobot shares have fallen more than 40 percent this year. The company’s second quarter revenue, reported Friday, fell to $255.4 million, down from $365.6 million in the year-ago period. It blamed declining revenue on unanticipated order reductions, delays and cancellations from retailers, lower-than-anticipated direct-to-consumer sales, and the impact of changes in foreign exchange rates.
The company’s GAAP operating loss grew to $63.9 million in the quarter, up from a $3 million loss last year.
iRobot said it plans to lay off 140 people, about 10 percent of its workforce, as part of a restructuring.
iRobot has 15.7 million customers (those who have opted-in to its digital communications), up 35 percent from the second quarter of 2021.
Colin Angle, the company’s CEO and chairman, will continue leading iRobot following the acquisition.