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Oracle To Buy Utility Software Maker Opower For $532 Million

Oracle Corp. today announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Opower Inc., the leading provider of customer engagement and energy efficiency cloud services to utilities, for $10.30 per share in cash. The transaction is valued at approximately $532 million, net of Opower’s cash.

Opower’s solutions enable over 100 global utilities, such as PG&E, Exelon and National Grid, to deliver a modern digital customer experience. Opower’s big data platform stores and analyzes over 600 billion meter reads from 60 million utility end customers, enabling utilities to proactively meet regulatory requirements, decrease the cost to serve, and improve customer satisfaction.

“Utilities want modern technology solutions that work together to meet their evolving customer, operational and compliance needs,” said Rodger Smith, Senior Vice President & General Manager at Oracle Utilities Global Business Unit.

“Together, Oracle Utilities and Opower will be the largest provider of mission-critical cloud services to utilities.”

“The combination will provide the industry with the most modern, complete cloud applications for the entire utility value chain, from meter to grid to end-customers,” said Dan Yates, Chief Executive Officer & Co-Founder, Opower. “We are excited to join Oracle and to bring even more value to our customers as part of the Oracle Utilities Industry Cloud Platform.”

The Board of Directors of Opower has unanimously approved the transaction. The transaction is expected to close in 2016, subject to Opower’s stockholders tendering a majority of Opower’s outstanding shares and derivative securities exercised prior to the closing of the tender offer, certain regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions.

With this deal, the enterprise software giant,Oracle Corp., has now spent roughly $1.2 billion in three (business) days on cloud acquisitions. Late last month, they bought Textura Corp.; providers of contract and payment cloud services for the construction industry, in a deal valued at $663 million. – ZDNet reports.

[Oracle]

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