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sebastiennight 5 days ago

> They are either profitable or acquired :)

Why? Once a company has been acquired, does it automatically fall out of profitability?

If it's acquired in a stock sale, it remains an independent entity and still has a P&L

If it's acquired/merged in an asset sale (not usually a good sign), it can still be assessed whether the new division is profitable - except in some rare cases like Google (allegedly!) not wanting to itemize some of their divisions to avoid too much regulatory scrutiny on monopoly positions.

> Becoming profitable never enters the picture :)

Seems very wrong based on looking at YC's portfolio, which apparently includes a bunch of profitable startups

troupo 5 days ago | parent [-]

> Once a company has been acquired, does it automatically fall out of profitability?

It becomes a part of the company that bought it?

> Seems very wrong based on looking at YC's portfolio, which apparently includes a bunch of profitable startups

It contains very few profitable startups. Those are the exceptions.

sebastiennight 4 days ago | parent [-]

> It becomes a part of the company that bought it?

Not necessarily. As I explained above, most successful acquisitions are stock sales, in which case the acquiring company now owns the startup (they hold the shares). The startup is still a separate entity at this point.

Google is known for just merging the acquired startups into their product line (and/or killing them), but it's not a hard rule that all acquisitions are mergers.

For example, AFAIK Livestream is still a subsidiary of Vimeo (ie wholly owned, but separate): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vimeo_Livestream

So Livestream can be profitable or not, separately from whether its acquirer is.