Matthew Miller
Feb 23, 2017

Singtel's Amobee to acquire Turn

Acquisition values DMP and DSP platform at US$310 million.

Source: Amobee
Source: Amobee

Singtel-owned Amobee has announced it will acquire DMP (data-management platform) and DSP (demand-side platform) company Turn to form what it calls "one of the largest, independent, end-to-end" buy-side platforms, providing access to all programmatic channels, formats and devices.

The acquisition, subject to regulatory approvals and expected to be completed during the first half of the year, values Silicon Valley-based Turn at US$310 million. Singtel said the purchase brings its total investment in Amobee to more than $1 billion. 

Turn will strengthen Amobee's data, analytics and media-buying capabilities to help brands and agencies plan and buy media for specific audiences in a more integrated way, maximizing their investments across desktop, mobile, video and social media, the company said.

“Turn has one of the most advanced DSP and DMPs in the industry, which will evolve Amobee’s technology stack, complementing our existing Amobee Brand Intelligence powered platform, and enable us to best serve advertisers with the most scalable and efficient programmatic, cross-channel and cross-device solutions,” Robert Woolfrey, Amobee SVP for Asia, said in a statement.

The acquisition accelerates Amobee's growth into a significant global digital marketing player, said Samba Natarajan, Singtel’s CEO of Group Digital Life. "It will also prime Amobee for expansion beyond the US and into the Asia Pacific, where the Singtel Group reaches some 640 million customers across 22 countries,” Natarajan added.

Robert Woolfrey

Singtel acquired Amobee in 2012 for $321 million, and added Adconion and Kontera for $235 million and US$150 million, respectively, in 2014.

In blog post, Turn CEO Bruce Falck said the combined team will have more than 800 people "focused on growing what we have built to date", including more than 200 people in product development.

"The ad tech space is not without its challenges," he added. "However, we uniquely have the opportunity to grow and build an even more exciting and valuable company for our customers, investors and employees. It’s early days in programmatic, so think of this as day two, the day we built an unstoppable platform to provide the world’s marketers with their one source of truth." 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

6 hours ago

John Wren on his vision for a bigger, better Omnicom

The chief executive tells Campaign why the IPG acquisition makes sense, what the impact will be and what will determine success.

9 hours ago

Big ideas, not big algorithms, will win Cannes

At Cannes 2025, Adobe’s Shantanu Narayen and Publicis’ Arthur Sadoun unpacked why AI may power creativity—but humans still pilot it.

11 hours ago

Campaign Cannes Global Podcast Episode 2

Our editors from the UK, US, Canada and APAC report from Campaign House at Cannes Lions 2025.

11 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: Publicis Creative

Publicis Creative had a commanding year, with Leo Burnett cementing its place as APAC’s new creative powerhouse across major award shows. But as structural shifts continue to take shape, all eyes are on how this momentum carries forward.