Game Companies Sit On 45+ Billion Dollars That Could Lead To Further Consolidation In The Industry

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Publicly listed gaming companies are sitting on a $45 billion pile of cash and cash equivalentsand that could lead to greater consolidation in the $188 billion video games market, according to a new report from venture capital firm Konvoy, which was shared exclusively with CNBC.

The likes of Activision Blizzard, Electronic Arts, Singapore's Sea, Japan's Nintendo and Bandai Namco, South Korea's Nexon, and China's NetEase, currently hold $45.1 billion in cash and cash equivalents, according Konvoy, which cited these companies' latest public reports.

That would give them more than enough financial firepower to look at potential acquisition targets that could help them build out their intellectual property and products.

In particular, gaming firms are looking to keep gamers more engaged for longer with live-service games that add more content over time and paid subscription packages that offer a certain amount of free games and access to cloud gaming, or the ability to play games via the cloud rather than downloading them to their machines.

Publicly listed gaming companies had a fairly rosy year in 2023, on the whole.

The VanEck Video Gaming and eSports ETF, which seeks to track MVIS Global Video Gaming & eSports Index, has climbed 20% in the year to date, according to Konvoy. The blue-chip S&P 500 index, by contrast, has climbed close to 12% year to date.

The VC firm said that the world's biggest tech firms which includes Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Apple, Meta, Netflix, China's Tencent, and Japan's Sony, have a combined $229.4 billion of cash on their balance sheets to deploy on potential deals.

Josh Chapman, a partner at Konvoy, said the company expects the Microsoft-Activision deal — which saw the Redmond, Washington-based technology giant pay $69 billion for U.S. game publisher Activision Blizzard — would likely lead to further mergers and acquisition activity and create a new generation of gaming companies.

"As active gaming investors, we believe that gamers and gaming startups stand to benefit from the deal as it improves the value-proposition for gamers and leads to a vibrant M&A environment for other deals to get closed," Chapman told CNBC in emailed comments.

Still, Konvoy's Chapman anticipates the picture for gaming VCs and startups will look brighter next year,as grim venture investing conditions start to improve — however, funding for gaming firms has returned to a " sustainable new normal" that will continue at the current pace for the next few years.

Konvoy is projecting long-term growth for the games industry in the coming years, though. The firm said that it expects a compound annual growth rate of 9% in the next five years, with the industry reaching a whopping $288 billion in overall sales by 2028.
 
Consolidation is inevitable. For many years, video games made money, but on a lower level. Now, the money is on a massive scale, so it is attracting big business.

It isn't great, but nothing is going to stop it.
 
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