By
Michael Kanellos
Thursday, May 20 2004 11:18 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39180095,00.htm
Security specialist Symantec announced on Wednesday that it plans to pay
US$370 million to acquire Brightmail, a maker of tools for blocking spam and
viruses.
San Francisco-based Brightmail,
which filed the preliminary paperwork for an initial public offering in March,
reported a net income of about US$1.1 million on revenue of US$26 million in 2003,
compared with a net loss of US$5.2 million on revenues of US$12.1 million in 2002,
according to its U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
Once known mostly for its Norton AntiVirus tools, Symantec is expanding to
provide a variety of security software, services and hardware. To this end, it
has made a number of acquisitions in the past two years, including SafeWeb
and On
Technology.
Symantec invested
in Brightmail in 2000 and holds approximately 11 percent of the company's
stock.
In its fourth fiscal quarter, ended April 2, Symantec reported
a net profit of US$117 million, or 35 US cents a share. That compares with a
profit of US$68 million, or 21 US cents a share, a year ago. Analysts on average had
expected Symantec to post a net profit of 34 US cents a share, according to
research firm Thomson First Call.
Revenue, meanwhile, climbed to US$556 million in the quarter, up 43 percent
from a year ago.