Before the bell rang on Wall Street, Intel shocked the army of Latte sipping financial wonks by announcing its intentions to buy security leader McAfee. The deal is valued at $7.7 billion or $48 per share, about a 60% premium on the stock price.
A few financial analysts who cover Intel say that this is about Intel’s mobile device aspirations. Maybe, but McAfee just got into the mobile device security market and my guess is that this business accounts for $5 million in revenue or less.
Sorry Wall Street but that ain’t it at all. I believe that Intel sees the same thing I see. The security market is wildly fragmented with vendors producing tactical point products for its customers. These point products can no longer address the environment of sophisticated and massive threats. In the very near future, enterprise and service provider security technologies must deliver unprecedented levels of scalability, manageability and integration.
Guess what? In today’s market there isn’t a single vendor who can deliver a security product suite anywhere near what’s needed in the market. Get it Wall Street? There is massive emotional demand but no supply. Here’s the kicker — without significant improvements in security, this whole Internet party hosted by companies like , eBay, , , etc. could get really, really ugly soon.
To be fair, McAfee can’t deliver the level of scale, manageability and integration that the market demands but it’s as close as any other vendor. Combine this with Intel hardware, money, and brainpower and you’ve gotten something.
I believe Intel sees a market opportunity, not a product opportunity. Yes, there is plenty of room to integrate McAfee with mobile phones, microprocessors, and NSPs but this is a footnote to the story.
A few other observations:
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Tags: ArcSight, Check Point, Fortinet, IBM, Intel, LogRhythm, McAfee, Nitro Security, RedSeal, RSA, Sourcefire, Symantec
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