Google eyes €22bn acquisitions on way to new markets

Search engine giant reveals plans in letter to regulators

Google’s overseas cash mountain reached $34.5 billion at the end of March. Photograph: Boris Roessler/Epa
Google’s overseas cash mountain reached $34.5 billion at the end of March. Photograph: Boris Roessler/Epa

Google expects to spend up to $30 billion (€22 billion) on foreign acquisitions as it expands into markets such as hardware, according to a disclosure made to US securities regulators.

The trawl for big overseas purchases has already seen the company come close to forging at least one big deal, though talks over a proposed $4 billion-$5 billion acquisition of an unnamed foreign business were called off late last year.

The scale of Google's global acquisition hopes was revealed in a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission in response to questions from regulators about what it plans to do with its overseas cash mountain, which reached $34.5 billion at the end of March.

Despite Google’s ambitions executives at other US tech firms warn there is a shortage of attractive, large-scale tech companies available for purchase outside the US, particularly in the internet industry.

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Core business That has opened the possibility of Google using an acquisition drive to move further from its core business, extending a radical diversification that has seen it venture into driverless cars to high-altitude balloons.

“It is reasonable to forecast that Google needs between $20 billion to $30 billion of foreign earnings to fund potential acquisitions of foreign targets and foreign technology rights from US targets in 2013 and beyond,” the company wrote.

It added: “We continue to expect substantial use of our offshore earnings for acquisitions. – (Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2014)