Google Inc plans to buy travel technology company ITA Software Inc in a US$700 million deal that would enable the Internet search leader to steer more of the airline reservations booked on the Web.
The all-cash acquisition, which was announced yesterday, signals Google’s intention to challenge flight-comparison services that are ITA customers, including Kayak, FareCompare, Hotwire and Microsoft Corp’s Bing Travel. The deal is likely to face a rigorous review by federal antitrust regulators.
“There is clearly more room for competition and innovation” in online travel, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said in a conference call. “We will improve the way flight information is organized.”
ITA Software, a 500-employee company created in 1996 by computer scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, sells technology that helps run the reservation systems of many airlines, including American, Southwest, Alaska and Continental. Its software also powers the tools that other travel Web sites use to track air fares.
The widespread reliance on ITA’s technology means federal regulators are likely to spend six months to a year trying to determine whether the acquisition will give Google an unfair advantage in the rapidly growing online travel market, said Ted Henneberry, an antitrust lawyer in Washington for Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe.
“This is going to raise a lot of eyebrows,” he said.
Schmidt declined to predict when the deal might close, but said he expected Google would ultimately win approval after regulators take a “fair amount” of time to review the deal.
“We are pretty confident that this is pro-competitive and pro-consumer,” Schmidt said.
He declined to say how much Google will have to pay if regualtors block the proposed purchase.
Both the Federal Trade Commission and US Justice Department declined to comment yesterday.
Online travel industry analyst Henry Harteveldt predicted the acquisition will be cleared because ITA Software isn’t a direct competitor to Google.
If it clears the antitrust hurdle, Google will be picking up expertise that will help improve the quality of its search results in one of electronic commerce’s biggest markets.Consumers and small business travelers in the US will spend about US$45 billion on airline tickets booked online this year, and that figure is expected to rise to US$59 billion by 2014, Harteveldt said.
And with thousands of engineers at its disposal, Google conceivably could build upon ITA’s success in the airline industry to expand into hotel, rental car and cruise reservations.
Google is counting on ITA’s expertise to improve the quality of its search results when people are looking to make airline reservations.
Schmidt predicted the biggest winners in this deal would be consumers, but he also predicted Google would be able to drive more traffic to airlines and travel agencies such as Orbitz and Expedia.
Google would profit from ITA’s technology by selling more ads alongside the flight data.
Bing has been picking up more traffic with features that help people figure out whether the prices of airline tickets are likely to increase or decrease.
Like other search engines specializing in travel, Bing checks multiple sites at once for the best deals and sends users to those sites to book there.
Travel Web sites generally earn fees for sending traffic to flight booking sites, but Google appears more interested in improving its travel search service so that it can retain users and sell more ads.
“That’s the allure for them,” said Gary Reback, an antitrust attorney who has been trying to convince regulators that Google has been abusing its power. “They want to control all that traffic” that has been going to the specialty travel sites.
‘LAGGING BEHIND’: The NATO secretary-general called on democratic allies to be ‘clear-eyed’ about Beijing’s military buildup, urging them to boost military spending NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte mentioning China’s bullying of Taiwan and its ambition to reshape the global order has significance during a time when authoritarian states are continuously increasing their aggression, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said yesterday. In a speech at the Carnegie Europe think tank in Brussels on Thursday, Rutte said Beijing is bullying Taiwan and would start to “nibble” at Taiwan if Russia benefits from a post-invasion peace deal with Ukraine. He called on democratic allies to boost defense investments and also urged NATO members to increase defense spending in the face of growing military threats from Russia
PEACEFUL RESOLUTION: A statement issued following a meeting between Australia and Britain reiterated support for Taiwan and opposition to change in the Taiwan Strait Canada should support the peaceful resolution of Taiwan’s destiny according to the will of Taiwanese, Canadian lawmakers said in a resolution marking the second anniversary of that nation’s Indo-Pacific strategy on Monday. The Canadian House of Commons committee on Canada-Chinese relations made the comment as part of 34 recommendations for the new edition of the strategy, adding that Ottawa should back Taiwan’s meaningful participation in international organizations. Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy, first published in October 2022, emphasized that the region’s security, trade, human rights, democracy and environmental protection would play a crucial role in shaping Canada’s future. The strategy called for Canada to deepen
LEAP FORWARD: The new tanks are ‘decades more advanced than’ the army’s current fleet and would enable it to compete with China’s tanks, a source said A shipment of 38 US-made M1A2T Abrams tanks — part of a military procurement package from the US — arrived at the Port of Taipei early yesterday. The vehicles are the first batch of 108 tanks and other items that then-US president Donald Trump announced for Taiwan in 2019. The Ministry of National Defense at the time allocated NT$40.5 billion (US$1.25 billion) for the purchase. To accommodate the arrival of the tanks, the port suspended the use of all terminals and storage area machinery from 6pm last night until 7am this morning. The tanks are expected to be deployed at the army’s training
TECH CONFERENCE: Input from industry and academic experts can contribute to future policymaking across government agencies, President William Lai said Multifunctional service robots could be the next new area in which Taiwan could play a significant role, given its strengths in chip manufacturing and software design, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman and chief executive C.C. Wei (魏哲家) said yesterday. “In the past two months, our customers shared a lot of their future plans with me. Artificial intelligence [AI] and AI applications were the most talked about subjects in our conversation,” Wei said in a speech at the National Science and Technology Conference in Taipei. TSMC, the world’s biggest contract chipmaker, counts Nvidia Corp, Advanced Micro Devices Inc, Apple Inc and