Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
News

eToys Spins Off BabyCenter

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
eToys Spins Off BabyCenter

After outbidding Amazon and other suitors for the right to acquire BabyCenter, eToys is now selling the unit for a fraction of what it paid.


Increase Customer Sales with VerticalResponse Email Marketing! Quickly and easily send email newsletters, coupons & sales announcements to your customers – no technical expertise needed. Sign up for your Free Trial today and send 100 emails on us!

Bankrupt e-tailer eToys has sold its BabyCenter unit to Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) for US$10 million in cash, the health care products giant announced Friday. The sale price constitutes a fraction of what eToys paid for BabyCenter two years ago.

The asset sale comes after eToys and Goldman Sachs tried for months without success Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales to find a buyer to take over the once high-flying online retailer, and days after eToys announced it will file for bankruptcy protection from its lengthy list of creditors.

Included in the sale of the BabyCenter unit are content sites BabyCenter.com, ParentCenter.com and BabyCentre.co.uk., according to Johnson & Johnson.

However, the similarly named BabyCenter Store, a retail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse outlet, will not be part of the sale. Instead, the BabyCenter Store will be temporarily closed, pending the outcome of eToys' bankruptcy proceedings.

Johnson & Johnson, which is based in New Brunswick, New Jersey, said it will maintain the BabyCenter unit's San Francisco headquarters and that BabyCenter "expects to retain and add to the current staff."

According to published reports, Johnson & Johnson may expand the unit in the future, possibly to include an e-commerce component again.

Jewel in Crown

In many ways, BabyCenter had been a bright spot for eToys ever since it acquired the site in mid-1999 for $150 million worth of stock, outbidding Amazon.com and other suitors.

During the past two years, the site regularly ranked high in generation of Internet traffic, and became a surprise winner of a 2000 Webby Award.

eToys itself has fared far less well, however. The company's days have been numbered since mid-2000, when it began to appear on dot-com death watch lists of potential shakeout victims, due to its fast cash burn rate.

The timeline for eToys' demise accelerated when eToys warned in December that it would miss fourth-quarter revenue targets, due in large part to fierce competition from a site operated jointly by Toysrus.com and Amazon.

Slash and Burn

eToys followed that news with word of 700 layoffs in January and a warning that it would burn through its cash reserves by the end of March.

In mid-February, eToys laid off the rest of its staff, saying it owed more than $274 million to creditors, but was still holding out hope for a last-minute rescue.

Earlier this week, eToys announced it would file for bankruptcy protection within days. The e-tailer also told investors that it would soon be delisted from the Nasdaq exchange and that its stock should be considered "worthless."

The eToys site is slated for shut down on approximately March 8th.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Keith Regan


Related News Alerts

Layoffs Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Keith Regan

Yahoo Slaps Fresh Coat of Gloss on Microsoft Deal Defense
June 30, 2008
With its shareholders meeting set to take place in less than five weeks, Yahoo has put together a 32-page presentation, emphasizing why the investors should vote to keep the current board in place. The company also reiterated why it chose to partner with Google instead of letting Microsoft buy part of it.
French Court Stings eBay With $63M Judgment Over Knockoff Sales
June 30, 2008
eBay is planning to appeal a ruling by a French court that ordered it to pay $63 million to the luxury goods maker Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessey. The court also barred the online auctioneer from selling four brands of perfume on its Web sites accessible in France.
New Auto Loan Leads Marketplace Shifts Into Drive
June 30, 2008
Reply.com's move into the auto finance market is a logical one the company, as automotive advertising spending is moving online in increasingly greater amounts. The company is partnering with the Detroit Trading Company to create a massive repository of auto finance leads online.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network