Kobo might have played third fiddle to Amazon and Barnes & Noble in the e-reader space, but those strings will soon carry a different tune — the company just announced it’s being acquired by Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten for $315 million. Though Kobo’s stock was distributed a few different places (founding Canadian retailer Indigo had a majority, and defunct bookseller Borders famously had 11 percent), Rakuten has agreed to buy up the lot, giving the Japanese company a line of e-readers, tablets, ebook software and an estimated 5.6 million users to call its own.
Kobo purchased by Rakuten, the Amazon.com of Japan
Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten just signed an agreement to buy Kobo for $315 million.
Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten just signed an agreement to buy Kobo for $315 million.


That could help the company compete with Amazon in yet another way, and perhaps help Kobo compete with the Nook and Kindle yet; Rakuten claims to be “one of the world’s top 3 e-commerce companies by revenue,” and is growing globally fast. It acquired US e-tailer Buy.com last year, and nabbed the UK’s Play.com just a couple months back. The Kobo deal’s scheduled to close in early 2012, and promises to allow Kobo to keep its current operations in Toronto completely intact. Find some forward-looking executive quotes on the deal at our source links.









