Square Enix to buy other games companies

Jagi

True Fist of the North Star
OG Investor
VG247: Square Enix president Yoichi Wada has yet again said the firm is considering buying stakes in rival games companies to stave off competition both in Japan and abroad.

“Economies of scale and breadth of scope is getting important. It may be a business alliance or it may be us taking a stake in others, but we need to go beyond traditional Square Enix,” he said, speaking at the Reuters Global Technology, Media and Telecoms Summit in Tokyo.

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Square Enix may take stakes in rivals

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese videogame maker Square Enix Co Ltd (9684.T: Quote, Profile, Research) said it is considering taking stakes in game developers to combat rising competition from established game publishers and other entertainment companies.

"Economies of scale and breadth of scope are getting important. It may be a business alliance or it may be us taking a stake in others, but we need to go beyond traditional Square Enix," Square Enix President Yoichi Wada told the Reuters Global Technology, Media and Telecoms Summit in Tokyo on Tuesday.

"We face competition not only from Japanese videogame companies but from game companies worldwide. We also see some new players from outside the videogame industry coming in," he said.

Game makers are rapidly consolidating to boost their competitiveness, with Electronic Arts (ERTS.O: Quote, Profile, Research) planning to take over rival videogame maker Take-Two Interactive Software Inc (TTWO.O: Quote, Profile, Research), while Vivendi's (VIV.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) game unit is merging with Activision Inc (ATVI.O: Quote, Profile, Research).

Square Enix, creator of blockbuster game series including "Dragon Quest", "Final Fantasy" and "Kingdom Hearts", was itself created in 2003 through a merger of two leading Japanese game makers.

Asked if Square Enix is currently in talks with others, Wada said: "That's part of a CEO's job. That's part of our routine work."

Square Enix said last month it would move to a holding company structure in October, saying it was necessary to move to the kind of organization that could respond to business tie-ups and investment opportunities quickly and flexibly.

Wada said Square Enix has no fixed budget for investing in other companies, but he pointed out that management is allowed to issue about 290 million additional shares without approval at a general shareholders' meeting.

"I'm not suggesting we are going to use up all that. But we have a capacity to do that," he said.

Based on Tuesday's closing price, 290 million shares in Square Enix are worth 960 billion yen ($9.20 billion).

Wada also said he aims to boost the ratio of overseas videogame software sales among its total game software revenues to 80 percent in three years from about 50 percent now.

Following his comments, shares in Square Enix were up 0.9 percent at 3,300 yen in early afternoon, outperforming the Nikkei average .N225, which fell 0.8 percent.

Square Enix is set to announce earnings results for the year ended March 31 and outlook for the current business year on Friday.

Analysts on average expect Square Enix's operating profit to come to 32.4 billion yen in the current business year to March 2009, up sharply from the company's own estimate for the previous business year of 21 billion yen.

Source: reuters.com
 
"We Need To Go Beyond Traditional Square Enix" - Kotaku

yoichi_wada_friend.jpg

Square Enix honcho Yoichi Wada (above, left) is worried. Western game companies are doing really well! Meaning that competition is getting harder. Yet, Wada hopes to capitalise on the Western market, aiming to increase the ratio of overseas sales from its current 50 percent to 80 percent in the next three years. According to the exec:

We face competition not only from Japanese videogame companies but from game companies worldwide. We also see some new players from outside the videogame industry coming in... Economies of scale and breadth of scope is getting important. It may be a business alliance or it may be us taking a stake in others, but we need to go beyond traditional Square Enix.
That business alliance sounds nice and all. But, how about stop calling everything Final Fantasy? Or make things other than RPGs? Or if you are going to make RPGs, why not make the games people have been asking for for the past decade?
 
:lol:

EA extended deadline to june 16th for take two buyout. would be funny if square stepped in with an offer.
 
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