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Toronto-based Fusepoint sells for US $124.5M

Toronto-based Fusepoint sells for US $124.5M

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 02 Jun 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

U.S.-based hosting provider Savvis, which announced its purchase on Tuesday, said the deal was motivated by demand from its large multinational customers looking for services in Canada. Plus, commentary on the deal from IDC Canada

Savvis Inc. is dishing out US $124.5 million in cash to purchase Toronto-based data centre hosting provider Fusepoint Inc.

 

With the acquisition, the St. Louis-based cloud hosting provider will take over Fusepoint’s data centre facilities in Mississauga, Ont., Montreal and Vancouver. The company said it is following the advice of its large multinational customers, many of which have requested colocation and managed services in Canada.

 

The acquisition of Fusepoint, a portfolio company of M/C Venture Partners, is expected to close early this summer.

 

According to Savvis, 50 per cent of Fusepoint’s business is concentrated in managed hosting, which should blend nicely with its core business. The rest of Fusepoint is spilt between colocation (30 per cent) and application services (20 per cent).

 

Jim Ousley, chairman and CEO at Savvis, said Fusepoint is “very well-positioned” in the Canadian hosting market with a strong footprint across the country. He was also very impressed with the company’s recent investments to improve its three data centres, which now offer more than 40,000 sellable square feet.

 

“The main initiative was for geographical expansion into Canada,” Ousley told analysts and journalists in a conference call on Tuesday. “Our largest customers have asked us to expand into Canada and Fusepoint allows us to do that.”

 

Ousley added that Toronto is the financial capital of Canada, which will fit nicely with its financial services customer base.

 

Through the deal, the company will also look to pick up Fusepoint’s 330 enterprise cloud computing and storage customers. With almost none of these customers in the financial services industry, another favourable aspect of the deal is the lack of customer overlap, Ousley said.

 

“There is no major customer overlap at all,” he said. “(Fusepoint) worked with major consulting firms that we have not done business with to any extent in the past.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.
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