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Hackers, Insiders Can Threaten M&A Activity, Say IBM, Fortinet

Chinese hackers had already roamed Nortel’s systems for nearly 10 years when, five years after the breach discovery, business communications firm Avaya acquired bankrupt Nortel Enterprise Solutions — and, unknowingly, also acquired that company’s attackers. That was a bellwether moment for the M&A world, says Caleb Barlow,  IBM ( IBM ) vice president of security. Until then, an acquisition target’s cybersecurity situation wasn’t a box on the usual M&A checklist. “It was the moment everyone in the M&A community woke up,” Barlow told IBD. “They said, ‘We better be looking at their security posture as well, otherwise you could not only legitimately acquire the company, but also the attacker.” As Barlow recounts, Nortel’s downfall came down to seven passwords, including the chief executive officer’s. Hackers with Chinese IP addresses gained access to Nortel’s network as early as 2000 and so thoroughly dug in that they weren’t discovered until 2004. Avaya, which acquired that Nortel business for $900 million in 2009, didn’t learn of the breach until after its acquisition closed. And even then, the hackers were still entrenched in the system. “No one had really thought about this type of problem before because cybersecurity wasn’t one of the normal things you’d think about in the M&A process,” Barlow said. “In my view, it’s now a critical component.” Quantifying Risk In A Bidding War Consulting firm Deloitte found 70% of 2,500 firms surveyed in 2015 considered security to be a “high” or “very high” priority in M&As. That’s up from 64% in 2014. Both corporate and private equity respondents increased their due diligence efforts over the span of the year. But also in the 2014 Deloitte survey, 78% of firms said security wasn’t a general piece of M&A due diligence, and 66% said rapid-fire M&A bidding made cyber risks “very difficult” to quickly quantify. Deloitte didn’t reiterate those questions in its 2015 survey. Rapid-fire M&As include  Apple ( AAPL ) chip supplier Skyworks Solutions ( SWKS ) and Microsemi ( MSCC ) last year facing off in a month-long bidding battle for PMC-Sierra ( PMCS ). Due diligence might or might not have been rushed in that deal, but such aggressive bidding wars are infrequent, Fortinet ( FTNT ) CFO Drew Del Matto told IBD. More often, an acquirer examines a target’s products, financials, policies and systems. IT security is just a new layer of the necessary due diligence. This mindset is new, and there are built-in risks with every piece of due diligence, NSS Labs CEO Vikram Phatak says. NSS Labs independently tests and reports on the efficiency of cybersecurity products, similar to Consumer Reports. It’s likely an acquirer has “a really good handle on the debt the company will have, the expense structure of the company, the historical growth rates,” he told IBD. “Where you get a little sticky is they may not have time to do all the (security-related) due diligence by calling the customers.” Cybersecurity works along the same lines, Phatak says. Tech companies, especially, should have a keen understanding of the security measures in place, BitSight CEO Stephen Boyer told IBD. BitSight rates the cybersecurity posture of about 40,000 companies, similar to a FICO score, so customers can assess their own security risk but also the risks of potential or current partners, vendors and customers. “If you go in and say, ‘Who’s in charge of this (security)?’ and everyone looks around, then you probably have a problem,” Boyer said. Avoiding Post-Merger Slip Even including cybersecurity within due diligence isn’t a surefire protection, Boyer said. Former telecom provider Pacnet discovered a breach on April 3, 2015, after Telstra finalized its $697 million acquisition of Pacnet. Telstra was notified on April 16 — the day the merger completed. An SQL code injection on a Pacnet Web service application server opened hackers to the network, email and administrative processes. Acquirers should be “monitoring that window of due diligence up until the week the deal closes,” Boyer said. “Monitor it all through the process, because there would be a slip-up along the way.” Before signing off on a merger, an acquirer should get a sense of the target’s cybersecurity culture, Barlow says. Examine past incidents — processes, logs and reports. if those documents aren’t available, then there might be a problem. That goes double for a tech company. “If they don’t have those policies in place, then you start asking other questions,” Barlow said. “If they weren’t paying attention to security, what else weren’t they looking at?” Phatak suggests acquirers also scope out a target’s security vendors. Not every cybersecurity vendor is built the same and the quality of a target’s security purchases can be very telling, he told IBD. “Make sure the company you’re acquiring didn’t skimp on security,” he said. “(Products) are not all equal, but from a compliance perspective, a check-box perspective, they all look the same.” Breaches From The Inside Del Matto estimates two-thirds of breaches come from the inside, at the hands of either careless or disgruntled employees. M&A, often accompanied by layoffs, can breed the latter. “When people feel like they’re at risk, they’re more likely to do something that may expose the company to a cyber risk,” Del Matto said. More benign actions, like inadvertently visiting an infected website, can lead to malware attaching on the system. But Del Matto is more concerned about the damage a disgruntled employee with absolute access can wreak. Barlow suggests a company identify its “crown jewel” and then tuck it into a protected place with limited access. That crown jewel could be IP, financial information, client lists, personal information — basically anything worth stealing, Phatak told IBD. “If someone is able to get into the customer list, they could see what deals are in the (pipeline),” Del Matto said. “They may monetize those by selling them or, worse, leaving the company with those lists in their hands.” Beyond guarding that data, an M&A-engaged company should embrace employees into the new culture, he said. Because, “when you buy a company, you buy a competitive advantage. If that leaks out in some other way, you’re destroying the value of the M&A.”

Spectrum Wild Cards May Add Supply, Impact Verizon, T-Mobile, AT&T

Federal regulators appear set to go forward this spring with the auction of airwaves now owned by local TV broadcasters, but other spectrum-related developments loom as wild cards that could increase supply, thereby impacting wireless industry competition and M&As. Those other developments include the contract award for FirstNet, the federal government’s plan to create a nationwide wireless broadband network dedicated to public safety; the re-emergence of LightSquared, renamed Ligado Networks, from Chapter 11; and whether wireless firms succeed in lobbying to use commercial LTE technology in unlicensed spectrum now allocated to Wi-Fi. The Federal Communications Commission still plans to begin the “Broadcast Incentive Auction” on March 29. The auction, which could last five to six months, will free up an estimated 60 megahertz to 80 MHz of prime, low-frequency radio spectrum for wireless services. Results of the spectrum auction could affect the competitive future of IBD Leaderboard company AT&T ( T ), which has seen accelerating growth in recent quarters, and rival Verizon Communications ( VZ ) — a member of IBD’s Big Cap 20 — as well as highly rated Comcast ( CMCSA ). AT&T and Verizon are expected to buy TV airwaves in the auction, and cable leader Comcast also will likely bid, say analysts.  Alphabet ’s ( GOOGL ) Google has ruled itself out. AT&T and Verizon own more than 70% of low-frequency airwaves in the top 100 U.S. markets. Low-frequency airwaves travel over long distances and can pass through walls, improving in-building services. The FCC will impose a “quiet period” that bans negotiation over spectrum until the auction is over. Satellite TV broadcaster Dish Network ( DISH ) has acquired some 75 MHz of midband spectrum — which covers a little less territory than low-frequency spectrum — but it lacks a wireless network partner and is in limbo until the auction ends, analysts say. Dish has filed to bid in the auction, but observers are uncertain that it will. The auction’s outcome could well raise or lower the odds of some major deals, long rumored in the industry: — that Comcast will acquire a wireless services provider; — that a cable TV leader will strike an alliance with Verizon; — that Verizon will enter into a spectrum-leasing deal with Dish; — that Dish and T-Mobile will merge. But even beyond the auction, by early 2017, further developments involving the FirstNet contract, Ligado, unlicensed-LTE and satellite wireless firm Globalstar ( GSAT ) could impact Dish’s plans, as well as the spectrum strategies of AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile. That’s because all these elements provide alternatives for network capacity, aside from the auction. Here’s a run-down of several scenarios: — FirstNet. Whoever wins this first-responder contract would need to invest in network infrastructure. Congress has set aside 20 MHz of spectrum — a wide swath of the airwaves — in the “D block” of the 700 MHz frequency band for the public safety network. The winning bidder is expected to enter into a lease agreement with the FirstNet authority for access to the 20 MHz of prime airwaves. While the FirstNet public safety network would be prioritized for emergency responders, the winning bidder would also be able to use the spectrum for commercial purposes and consumer services. The government will award the FirstNet contract after the TV airwave auction ends, if the government’s timetable proceeds as planned. Verizon has been viewed as the front-runner, but AT&T has made clear that it’s interested. T-Mobile ( TMUS ) could bid but faces long odds vs. AT&T and Verizon, analysts say. — LTE-U. Verizon and T-Mobile have been biggest proponents of developing a technical standard that would allow 4G LTE commercial technology to use unlicensed spectrum. Google, Microsoft ( MSFT ) and the Wi-Fi Alliance, which certifies Wi-Fi network gear, have lobbied the FCC to protect unlicensed airwaves, saying that interference could impair Wi-Fi services. Apple ( AAPL ), a Wi-Fi Alliance member, has not said anything publicly. Verizon and AT&T claim that no special LTE-U equipment certification is needed as long as devices meet certain basic FCC rules for unlicensed spectrum. Chipmaker Qualcomm ( QCOM ) has been backing LTE-U deployment. The FCC in February allowed Qualcomm to move ahead with LTE-U testing at two Verizon facilities to demonstrate that the technology would not interfere with Wi-Fi. Qualcomm and the Wi-Fi Alliance have been working on “coexistence” plans. The cable TV industry has a big stake in the outcome, analysts say, because Comcast, Charter Communications ( CHTR ) and others have been expanding public Wi-Fi networks. While Verizon has targeted 3.5 GHz spectrum in the near term, it could try to carry out LTE-U in higher 5 GHz airwaves that cable TV firms covet. If LTE-U gets a green light, the Apple iPhone and other devices could support the technology by 2018. — LightSquared , now Ligado. Former Verizon Chairman and CEO Ivan Seidenberg is chairman of Ligado, while former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt is a board member. Ligado, controlled by private equity firms, has a sizable 35 MHz of midband spectrum. After emerging from bankruptcy, Ligado reached agreements with tractor maker Deere ( DE ) and GPS device maker Garmin ( GRMN ), resolving issues over potential global positioning system interference. While Ligado might provide services to industries such as energy or transport, or pursue next-generation 5G services, it could sell the airwaves as well. The company hasn’t spelled out its new business model, analysts say, and it’s still awaiting some FCC approvals to use the spectrum for commercial purposes. — Globalstar.  The FCC has been studying Globalstar’s petition to use airwaves in the midfrequency 2.4 GHz block for wireless services. The Wi-Fi Alliance and other groups have opposed Globalstar’s plans, citing possible interference issues. Globalstar could lease capacity to a wireless firm or an Internet company if it wins at the FCC. Globalstar’s stock, though, has plunged about 50% in the past year to near 1.40 while its FCC approval has languished. Image provided by Shutterstock .