I think, as Mr. Harris suggests, that this acquisition accelerates an IPO.
It doesn't seem to help attract a private buyer. A private buyer's target would be the SAS recurring revenue stream. Buyers of large declining revenue streams include Broadcom and private equity.
A buyer laying out $5-10B for $3B ARR won't care about this $35M investment. It's not big enough to be on their radar, and it doesn't fit their business model.
But if SAS plans to IPO, in this market, sprinkling a little AI on the product line gives a definite advantage.
TRIANGLE BUSINESS JOURNAL
SAS targets 'multibillion-dollar market' with acquisition
By Lauren Ohnesorge – Senior Staff Writer, Triangle Business Journal Nov 12, 2024
As it prepares to go public, SAS Institute is again investing in artificial intelligence by building its synthetic data generation capabilities through a rare technology asset acquisition.
The Cary company announced it is acquiring Hazy synthetic data technology, a move that comes with 13 employees. The plan, according to SAS, is to integrate Hazy’s design into the SAS Data Maker solution, which it debuted in May.
Integration of the technology should be complete by May 2025.
In an interview, SAS Chief Technology Officer Bryan Harris said the synthetic data technology enables an extension of what the company is already doing, including announcing the creation of its AI modeling group earlier this year. He said it all bodes well for the company’s IPO readiness plan, a priority for SAS since CEO Jim Goodnight went public with plans to pursue a public market debut in 2021.
In April, Harris said the company was about a year away from being ready to go public.
On Monday, he said the acquisition is another driver toward the company’s ambitions of someday becoming a public AI company.
“We think this is a multibillion-dollar market opportunity,” he said of the deal, calling it a “massive opportunity revenue-wise, which will obviously drive positive outcomes for our eventual IPO.”
The deal for Hazy's technology
SAS has been in talks with Hazy for eight months to a year, having evaluated multiple options before deciding Hazy’s “technology and their expertise really stood out in the market.”
Harris explains the technology as helping to train advanced AI models. Typically, a company starts with its own data.
“The problem is … the current data, the actual data doesn’t always reflect the complexity of the real world. It only reflects the complexity of the data you are seeing,” he said.
By adding synthetic data, you’re increasing the diversity of scenarios and customer behaviors you’re using to train those models without having to compromise privacy information.
One scenario is fraud. A credit card company may be servicing billions of transactions a day. Very few of those transactions are fraud. But by using synthetic data, you’re creating more of those fraud events and better training the AI to know what to look for when it comes to fraudulent transactions.
Hazy, a British company, was founded in 2017 and raised $9 million last year from investors such as Conviction VC, UCL Technologies, M12 (Microsoft’s venture capital fund) and Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC).
The company has raised a total of $14.8 million, according to Crunchbase.
In a statement, Goodnight said the deal “represents a pivotal step in our commitment to innovation in the next generation of data management and AI.”
“By integrating their technology, we can offer our customers unparalleled opportunities to harness data safely and effectively, enabling them to experiment and model scenarios that were previously out of reach and gain a competitive advantage,” he stated.
Gartner predicts that by 2026, 75 percent of businesses will use generative AI to create synthetic customer data, up from less than 5 percent last year.
SAS, long known for its analytics, has been making major investments in the AI space. SAS announced a second $1 billion investment into AI last year.
The first $1 billion commitment in 2019 was about the platform. The second, announced in May of last year, was about industry solutions, according to the company.