Airbnb accelerates deal making

Published Feb 14, 2017

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San Francisco - Airbnb is on a mission to be more than a

home-sharing platform. It wants to be a flight booker, an itinerary

planner and a vacation-home manager. To become a global travel behemoth, Airbnb

is considering a combination of acquisitions and partnership deals to quickly

grow its portfolio, according to three people with knowledge of Airbnb's

plans.

The company's targets are in luxury tourism, airfare

aggregation, group payments and guest-management, said the people, who asked

not to be identified because Airbnb hasn't authorized them to speak

publicly. Airbnb is also focused on doing deals in China and India, the people

said.

Airbnb declined to comment on specifics of its business

plans. "We are always looking to provide our community with access to new

and different options, but we have no announcements to make," Nick Papas,

a spokesman for Airbnb, wrote in an e-mail. One of the people said acquisitions

are not a material part of the company's strategy and that Airbnb does not

believe it needs to rely on acquisitions to grow.

On Thursday, Bloomberg reported that Airbnb's board

met to approve the purchase of Luxury Retreats, a vacation-home management

company in Montreal. The sale is expected to garner no more than $300 million

in cash and stock. Airbnb is also in the process of purchasing the

group-payments company Tilt. Airbnb declined to comment on the deals because

they are not yet public. 

New product categories would generate alternative revenue

sources for Airbnb. Over the last few years, after pressure from regulators,

Airbnb agreed to place limits on how long hosts can rent their homes to travellers

in certain cities. Officials in London, New York, Amsterdam, San Francisco and

Barcelona have claimed Airbnb’s short-term rentals violate local zoning laws

and displace long-term residents. The policymakers continue to seek laws that

could place considerable restrictions on Airbnb’s money-making ability.

Airbnb became profitable in the second half of 2016, when

revenue at the company increased more than 80 percent that year, Bloomberg

reported. Airbnb expects to remain profitable in 2017. Since launching in

2008, the home- and apartment-rental company has raised $3.1 billion in

capital, and still has nearly all its funding, three investors said. The

investors asked not to be identified because they have signed non-disclosure

agreements.

Identity shift

The company's identity shift is already underway. Last

year, Airbnb began selling unique travel experiences, like hat making tutorials

in London and coffee-roasting expeditions in Cape Town. In November, the

company announced it had a flight-booking tool and an itinerary-planning

feature in the works. The trip planner, it said, would give users personalized

travel suggestions based on their location and past behaviours. In order to

deliver on the ambitious project, two of the people said, Airbnb is looking

to partner with or acquire a travel search engine similar to competitor

Priceline Group’s Kayak.com.

"Airbnb has dominated in the urban-rental market but

still has lots of room to grow in vacation rental markets, where Expedia's

HomeAway is stronger and the average transaction value is significantly

higher," said Douglas Quinby, an analyst at the travel industry research

firm Phocuswright. Quinby, who expects Airbnb will pursue its initial public

offering over the next 12 to 24 months, said Airbnb will need to use that time

to drive growth in new product categories, such as vacation rentals and

business travel, as well as new geographies, to justify its private market

valuation of $31 billion.

Read also:  Airbnb to lose £325m in London bookings

Airbnb CFO Laurence Tosi has been a driving force behind

the company's newfound profitability, the investors said. Tosi, the former

CFO of Blackstone Group LP, joined the startup in 2015 and quickly built a

finance and development team composed of former Blackstone colleagues and

directors from Goldman Sachs. 

The investors said they don't expect Airbnb to spend the

nearly $3 billion it has sitting in cash. Airbnb is in the process

of negotiating a deal to buy the group payments company Tilt for just

$12 million in a combination of cash and stock, said an investor in one of the

companies. Tilt was last valued by investors at $400 million. Airbnb and

Tilt declined to comment on the acquisition.

In October, Airbnb considered purchasing the

flight-booking website Skyscanner, said two people familiar with the matter.

Airbnb declined to bid on the Scottish startup, which ultimately sold to Ctrip

International. for $1.7 billion. And in August, Airbnb held meetings to acquire

the Chinese home-sharing site Xiaozhu.com. The talks got serious by November,

but in December, Airbnb determined the company lacked the high-end appeal it

sought for its Chinese expansion. Airbnb and Xiaozhu declined to comment.

—With assistance from Kiel Porter and Lulu Chen

BLOOMBERG

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