The Economist - USA (2022-01-22)

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TheEconomistJanuary22nd 2022 BriefingTechnologyandinnovation 17

gimeencouragesspendingtobeputdown
as r&d if possible, which can distort
things.Butthatcanhardlyexplainthe34%
increase since 2019: thetax regime has
beenunchangedthroughoutthattime.
Capital expenditure—which mostly
goestowardsdatacentres,butalsoinAma­
zon’s case fulfilment centres—has also
grown, to $131bn a year. In the past 12
monthstheBig Five’sshareofcashflow
fromoperationsinvestedinr&dandcapi­
talexpenditurewas53%.Thatcomparesto
a medianof32%foralls&p500firms.
Onereasonfortrulyvastspendingis
trulyvastcompanies.Therevenuesofthe
BigFive,whichhaveacombinedmarket
valueofover$9trn,almosttripledbetween
2015 and2020.Butthoughwhenexpressed
asa proportionofsalesincreasedinvest­
mentlooksmoremodest,it isstillreal(see
chart1).Spendingonr&drosebya third
overthesameperiod,fromabout9%of
salesto12%,andcapitalexpendituregrew
bymorethana quarter,risingtwopercent­
agepointstoabout9%ofsales.
Buta crucialpartofitisthatthereare
specificgoalsthefirmswantto achieve
thatrequirea lotofr&d. Appleisonthe
lookoutforthepieceofhardwarethatwill
becomethenewiPhone,beit a carorvirtu­
al­reality(vr) headset.Amazonisrelent­
lesslytryingtoimprovetheefficiencyofits
warehousesanddeliverysystemandex­
pandtherangeofindustriesmakinguseof
AmazonWebServices. ForMeta,whichhas
seen its main offering, Facebook, es­
chewedbyyoungerpeople,a newbigthing
maybetheonlywaytosecuresurvival:its
recentname change will be for naught
withoutthenewtechtobackit up.
ResearchersattheBigFivepublished
over16,000 scientificpapersin thefive
years to 2019, and their topics provide
someinsightsintowhatisgoingon.Core
businessesarebeingburnished—arecent
paper from Amazon discusses ways of
“avoiding duplicates in the search re­
sults”—andsomeesotericpossibilitiesex­


plored—apaperfromateamwithmem­
bersinGoogleResearchprovidesinsights
intoa“humansurgicalsample fromthe
temporallobeofthecerebralcortex”. But
differentpublicationpoliciesatdifferent
companiesmakeithardtoputthedatato
quantitativeuse.
Alphabetisgenerouswhenitcomesto
publication,seekingtoattractresearchers
whowouldn’t joinacompanywhichre­
quired themto hide theirlightunder a
bushel.Asa resultAlphabetlooksgoodin
measuresbasedonpublications:itisthe
fourth­highest­ranked corporate institu­
tioninthecurrenteditionoftheNatureIn­
dex,whichmeasurestheimpactofaca­
demicresearchinthesciences(Roche,a
Swisshealth­carefirm,topsthelist).Apple
ismuchstricteraboutpublication. Butthat
doesn’tmeanit islessinnovative.

Cars,themetaverseandeverything
Analystsreckonthatsomewherebetween
5%and20%ofthetechgiants’massive
r&dspendinggoestowardswhat,forthe
purposes of this article, we are calling
“frontiertechnologies”:themetaverse,au­
tonomousvehicles,healthcare,space,ro­
botics,fintech,cryptoandquantumcom­
puting.(Artificialintelligence,ai,isnow
soubiquitousthatwearenotcountingit as
a frontierinitself.)Welookedatacquisi­
tions,investmentsandemploymentdata
to seewhich of thecompanies seemed
mostinterestedinwhat.
OverthepastthreeyearstheBigFive
haveacquired110­oddcompanies,accord­
ingtodatafromPitchBook,a researchout­
fit(thesedatadonotincludethe$69bnac­
quisitionofActivisionBlizzardbyMicro­
softannouncedthisweek,whichisreport­
edonintheBusinesssection).Thereisa
limittohowmuchthesedatacanreveal.In
mostcasesthedealsizewasnotmadepub­
lic and many smaller acquisitions are
treatedasrecruitmentandsonotintheda­
ta.Believersin“killeracquisitions”may
seesomeofthesedealsasattemptstohin­
derinnovation rather thanaccelerate it.
But evenif thatis the case,they show

wherethecompaniesarefocused.
Ofthe40­odddealsthatcamewithfig­
ures attached, the total valuation was
roughly$50bn.Overa quarterofthefirms
acquiredspecialisedinaiorincrunching
vastdatasets.Perhapsa quarterofthem
weredevelopingfrontiertechnologies(see
chart2 fora breakdown).
Microsoftisthebigspender.InAprilit
agreedtobuyNuanceCommunications,a
health­care­focused cloud and software
provider,for$19.7bn,inthelargestacquisi­
tionforwhichwehavedatainthepast
three years. It hasalso bought startups
which facilitate cloud services,such as
Mover.io,whichhelpsbusinessesshiftda­
tatothecloud,andCloudKnox,a cyber­se­
curityfirm.Google,whichlagsbehindMi­
crosoftandAmazoninitscloudoffering,
snappedupthreecloud­basedstartups,in­
cludingActifio.Italsoboughtthreewear­
ablesfirms,includingFitbit,onwhichit
spent$2.1bn,reflectingitsgrowinginter­
estinhealthcare.
In terms of single­mindedness, the
clearest signal is Meta’s pursuit of all
thingsmetaverse.Ofthe 13 firmsthatwork
inaugmentedreality(ar) orvrwhichwere
bought for a public price, Metabought
eight,includingBigBoxvrandDownpour
Interactive.Appleboughtanotherfour,in­
cludingNextvrandIKinema.Butitshigh­
estprioritybythismeasurewasai. Ofits 22
purchasessince 2019 morethanhalfhave
beenai­relatedstartups.
Anotherwindowintotheprioritiesof
fourofthefivecompaniesiswherethey
choosetotakeminoritystakes.Ofthe 101
companiesinwhichPitchBookdatashow
the firms investing overthe past three
yearsmorethana thirdareactiveinfron­
tiertechnology.TheexceptionhereisAp­
ple,which makes veryfewsuchinvest­
ments,noneofwhich havebeeninthe
frontierareas.
Here, too, the choices are revealing.
Takethefiveinvesteesthatmakecars.Am­
azoninvestedintwo,AuroraandRivian.
The latter,inwhichithasa20%stake,
wentpublicinNovemberandisvaluedat

Bigspenders
R&Dspending ,$bn

Source:Bloomberg *Estimate

1

Microsoft

Apple

Meta

Alphabet

Amazon

6050403020100

11.

6.

20.

12.

12.

13.

4.

21.

1.

11.

13.

2.

10.


13.

6.

2011 2016 2021* As%ofrevenue

Buyers and markets
Big Five tech firms, by frontier, 2019-

Sources:PitchBook;TheEconomist

2

Metaverse Cars Health care Space Robotics Fintech Crypto

Apple nil

Microsoft

Meta

Alphabet

Amazon

15129630

Investments, number of deals
129630

Acquisitions, number of deals
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