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FarmVille Maker Zynga Is Drawing Interest From Gaming Rivals

Zynga climbed 12 percent to close at $4.36 in New York on Tuesday, the biggest jump since May 2017.

FarmVille Maker Zynga Is Drawing Interest From Gaming Rivals
Zynga Inc. signage is displayed outside of the company’s headquarters in San Francisco, California, U.S. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Zynga Inc., the firm that created FarmVille and Words With Friends, has attracted takeover interest from other game developers amid a jump in dealmaking in the industry, people familiar with the matter said.

The San Francisco-based company has received preliminary approaches, though no formal talks are taking place at the moment, the people said, asking not to be identified because the discussions are private.

Zynga climbed 12 percent to close at $4.36 in New York on Tuesday, the biggest jump since May 2017, giving Zynga a market value of about $3.8 billion. The company first listed in 2011.

A spokeswoman for the company declined to comment.

Zynga operates in the cutthroat world of mobile gaming, where companies often struggle to replicate the runaway success of their early hits. It increasingly competes with larger firms, such as Paris-based Ubisoft Entertainment SA, maker of the Assassin’s Creed games, as well as Activison Blizzard Inc., which bought Candy Crush developer King Digital Entertainment Plc in 2016.

Rovio Entertainment Oyj, which developed the highly successful game Angry Birds, has produced multiple spinoffs in the years since. Still, Chief Executive Officer Kati Levoranta told investors on a call in August that its flagship game, Angry Birds 2, was overshadowing the performance of some of its other titles.

In August, Zynga scored a multi-year licensing deal with Walt Disney Co. to develop and publish a mobile game based on the Star Wars film franchise. The company’s shares jumped 7.8 percent the day after the announcement, erasing the stock’s losses for the year. More than 1 billion people have played games developed by the 11-year-old firm, according to its website.

Spending on companies that make entertainment software has more than doubled in the last 12 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The biggest so far was slot machine maker Aristocrat Leisure Ltd.’s $990 million bid for Big Fish Games.

Mobile Growth

The major games studios have been attempting to expand their mobile offerings in an increasingly competitive, but lucrative, market. Supercell Oy, the maker of mobile games Clash of Clans and Hay Day, posted revenue of just over $2 billion in 2017, despite lacking a global launch of a new game.

Ubisoft’s mobile business was profitable for the first time last fiscal year and accounted for 5 percent of the group’s full-year 2018 revenues. Yves Guillemot, CEO of Ubisoft, said in an earnings call in May that the company is intent on pushing more of its flagship PC games onto mobile.

In an Electronic Arts Inc. earnings call in July, Chief Financial Officer Blake Jorgensen said the company is looking at mobile firms for talent and business opportunities, rather than to buy a specific product. Although many of these opportunities are fairly small, “we want to make sure we keep enough dry powder in case something does change,” he said.

--With assistance from Ruth David, Nate Lanxon, Angelina Rascouet and Manuel Baigorri.

To contact the reporters on this story: Giles Turner in London at gturner35@bloomberg.net;Dinesh Nair in London at dnair5@bloomberg.net;Kiel Porter in New York at kporter17@bloomberg.net;Alex Barinka in San Francisco at abarinka2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dinesh Nair at dnair5@bloomberg.net, ;Aaron Kirchfeld at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net, Amy Thomson, Chitra Somayaji

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