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Is Mint Worth $170 Million?

By Jim Bruene on September 14, 2009 4:24 PM | Comments (2)

image The rumors broke yesterday and the confirmation came today. Intuit is buying two-time Finovate Best of Show winner, Mint for $170 million (see note 1). Few people are surprised by this move or the price. Mint's latest VC investors had just invested at a $140 million valuation a few weeks ago, so $170 mil is in line with that. It's also a 5x return to the total VC investment of $32 million, so everyone associated with Mint has to be pretty happy, especially in an environment where most assets have fallen by double digits in the past two years.

image The bigger question is whether the startup is worth $170 million? To Intuit, I think the answer is definitely yes (see below).

Intuit shareholders were indifferent with no real movement in share price today (see inset) on lower-than-normal trading volume (note 2). Because of the deal, Intuit lowered per-share net income estimates by 2 cents ($6.5 million loss) for FY 2010, and says there will be no material impact after that.

Apparently, Intuit will keep the Mint brand, at least for now. Mint CEO Aaron Patzer will be general manager of Intuit's personal finance products, both online AND desktop.

I'm no M&A expert, but here's why $170 million sounds reasonable to me:

  • At Intuit's current multiple (20x), Mint needs to generate approximately $10 million in annual profits to break even for shareholders. With 1+ million users at Mint, that's $10 per user per year, less than a buck a month.
  • While Mint isn't likely making that type of profit today, the combination of lower costs from Intuit back-end systems and additional revenues from upselling Intuit services (TurboTax, Cuckoos, and others), should elevate Mint to a $10 million-plus business unit relatively quickly.
  • Intuit needs an entree to the young-and-frugal segment, and Mint can be the starting point with users migrating to Quicken Online (which can be returned to a fee-based, advertising-free service), TurboTax, and/or QuickBooks over time.
  • Plus there's a bunch of intangibles that are difficult to quantify until you see how Intuit handles the Mint.com user base. Even though there's the usual grousing from Mint users today, in reality, Intuit's trustworthy brand name should be able to retain current users and grow the base.

Here's how I break down the purchase price:

$5 to $10 mil >>> Assets: Code, IP, employees, etc.
$10 to $20 mil >> Brand: Name, URL, traffic, awards, etc.
$100+ mil >>>>> Customers (1,000,000 at $100 each)
$25 to $50 mil >> Option value

Notes:
1. Mint won the audience voting for Best of Show at both our 2007 and 2008 Finovate conferences. If you want to see and meet the next Mint, we have a few dozen tickets left for Finovate 2009 on 29 Sep (purchase tickets here).
2. Last week, shares fell $0.40 or 1.4%.

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Your comment "Even though there's the usual grousing from Mint users" is absurd. Obviously, you've not used either product. If you had, you'd know that Mint is far and away superior to Quicken Online in every way. And, if you've used the desktop version of Quicken as long as I have, you'd understand why Mint users are upset. It isn't "grousing" when your issues and complaints are legitimate.

Interesting. After testing a variety of these products, I found Mint extremely frustrating as it constantly required me to update my account login/password information for about 60% of my accounts, which defeats the purpose of a "real-time" financial tool IMO. I do not have this issue with Quicken Online as they appear to have a faster connection to the services that I use, but instead find that the trending capabilities can vary from very accurate to totally inaccurate. I look forward to see what the combination of Intuit and Mint bring in the long-run.

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