Google’s takeover of a Philly firm helped it to dominate online ads. Now that deal prompts FTC review.
Something unusual was underway in early 2010 at Invite Media, a Philadelphia-based advertising technology startup. Under normal circumstances, it collected money from marketers and used it to buy digital ads. But over two days that spring it suddenly began paying for a wave of ads without waiting for checks to come in, using its own money instead. The company also paid off all its outstanding bills regardless of their due dates, sending its bank account balances plunging.
Something unusual was underway in early 2010 at Invite Media, a Philadelphia-based advertising technology start-up. Under normal circumstances, it collected money from marketers and used it to buy digital ads. But over two days that spring it suddenly began paying for a wave of ads without waiting for checks to come in, using its own money, instead. The company also paid off all its outstanding bills regardless of their due dates, sending its bank account balances plunging.
It would normally be irrational for a company to burn cash unnecessarily, but in this case burning cash was the point. Invite’s co-founders were finalizing a deal to sell the company to Google, and reducing Invite’s assets was a key part of their preparation. By drawing down its bank account, Invite could reduce its total assets to a low enough level that the companies could avoid submitting their deal for review to the Federal Trade Commission, say three people familiar with its finances.
“What we did was we collected as much accounts receivable as possible and immediately paid out everything we could so we didn’t have enough money on the books to trigger the FTC stuff,” recalled Michael Provenzano, one of the company’s co-founders.
The strategy worked. Google bought the company for about $80 million in 2010. It didn’t ask the FTC for pre-approval under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, which requires that companies do so when making acquisitions large enough to raise competition questions.
Now that the market power of Google and other huge tech companies has come under new scrutiny, the FTC is re-examining hundreds of deals that, like Invite, didn’t spark its interest when they happened. Officials at the commission now say they may have missed the significance of some deals that were small enough to avoid Hart-Scott-Rodino review.
FTC officials began scrutinizing these deals as far back as last fall, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing private conversations.
The market for online display ads was a multibillion-dollar opportunity for Google, and its success in developing advertising technology was a primary way it became one of the world's most valuable companies. Acquisitions were key to this transformation. Google purchased the advertising exchange DoubleClick for $3.1 billion in 2007, and the mobile advertising company AdMob for $750 million in 2009.
Both deals prompted antitrust reviews, with accompanying costs. “The review meant we had eight months of limbo that ended up being really hard because we didn’t know what was going to happen,” AdMob founder Omar Hamoui said, according to the book Mad Men of Mobile.
In retrospect, Invite had been serving as an important independent piece of the advertising market. As a start-up, it had created a software tool, called a demand-side platform, to make it simpler for marketers to buy ads online. The service allowed them to shop for advertising space on multiple platforms at once. Ad purchasers didn’t need to go to Google for ads and Yahoo for banner ads — Invite could help marketers find the best deal at a given time and buy from either platform.
After acquiring Invite, Google made the start-up’s tech a core piece of its suite of ad tech tools. By doing this, Google removed the neutral layer that separated it from ad buyers, said Bill Demas, who led one of Invite’s main competitors for years. The edge Google got from combining tools such as Invite into a single product amounted to an “unfair advantage,” he said.
A spokeswoman for the FTC declined to comment. In an emailed statement, a Google spokeswoman said that “former Google employees have created more than 2,000 start-ups, including companies like Pinterest, Quip and Instagram — that’s orders of magnitude more than the number of companies we’ve acquired. We have a long track record of working constructively with regulators and answering questions.”
Provenzano said he remembers being given a spreadsheet of tasks to accomplish before the deal could close. One of the key tasks: drawing down the company's bank account. Provenzano was sure about how and why this was done, he said, "because I moved the money."
Another person close to the deal confirmed that the company worked to avoid Hart-Scott-Rodino review, but declined to speak on the record for fear of offending Google.
It is legal for companies to lower the size of a deal or cut down on assets to avoid Hart-Scott-Rodino review, said Paul Jin, a partner at the law firm Goodwin Procter. “It could cause the FTC to say I don’t like that, it’s suspicious,” he said, but he added that isn’t against the commission’s rules and is fairly common.
It is not clear what the FTC hopes to achieve with its review of past acquisitions. The commission has held open the possibility of unwinding past deals. Given the ongoing investigations by the FTC and the Department of Justice, it may instead issue a report of its findings, said law professor Daniel Crane at the University of Michigan. That report could provide fodder for a larger investigation or for congressional legislation.
Demas, the former CEO of Turn, the Invite competitor, said the deal “frightened” his team. But it took a few years for the consequences to play out, as Google integrated Invite’s software into its own code base. Eventually, Google began to prevent competitors such as Demas from selling its ad inventory, leading business to slow.
Demas’s company struggled in the years after Google’s acquisition of Invite. Turn cut staff in 2015, and two years later sold itself to a subsidiary of a Singaporean telecommunications firm for about half the price of its valuation in 2013, when it had been considering an IPO.
Invite’s co-founders thought that they had lucked out by selling before Google bought one of its rivals, said Provenzano. “I don’t know what would have happened if we kept going forward. Obviously, we would have been competing with Google,” he said. “Why go through that battle?”