“Pure speculation of course.”
Isn’t that what this site is for? :-)
“Any serious buyer is looking at revenues/employees...”
Yes, and they count actual employees, not contractors and partners.
As best I can tell, actual employee headcount reached above 14,000, then dropped to around 12,000 — about a 15% reduction. Not coincidentally, over the same timespan, revenues saw about a 15% reduction.
Broadcom’s business model for software acquisitions is to cut the fat, then squeeze the juice out of a declining revenue stream. They inherited this model when they acquired Computer Associates.
So they would not be deterred by a poor revenue / employee metric. They would simply say, this is a metric we can improve.
But for a company with a low revenue / employee metric, Broadcom would not pay a high price. And SAS would not like to sell to a company that would lay off many of their loyal employees. On one of these issues or both, that deal evaporated.