Google acquires Fossil for $40m

In this file photo taken on 2 September 2015 The Google logo is displayed at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California. Photo: AFP
In this file photo taken on 2 September 2015 The Google logo is displayed at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California. Photo: AFP

Google agreed to pay $40 million for the smart watch technology of the fashion and accessory group Fossil, the companies said Thursday, enabling the California tech giant to expand in the growing wearable tech market.

As part of the deal, Texas-based Fossil Group's research and development team working on the smart watch will join Google, which will acquire the intellectual property for Fossil smart watches, the firms said.

The move would give Google the potential to create its own branded smart watches to compete against Apple, Fitbit and others in the wearable tech space.

"Wearables, built for wellness, simplicity, personalisation and helpfulness, have the opportunity to improve lives by bringing users the information and insights they need quickly, at a glance," said Stacey Burr, a vice president at Google Wear OS division.

"The addition of Fossil Group's technology and team to Google demonstrates our commitment to the wearables industry by enabling a diverse portfolio of smartwatches and supporting the ever-evolving needs of the vitality-seeking, on-the-go consumer."

Greg McKelvey, chief strategy and digital officer at Fossil, said in the statement: "We've built and advanced a technology that has the potential to improve upon our existing platform of smartwatches. Together with Google, our innovation partner, we'll continue to unlock growth in wearables."

Fossil moved into smart watches in 2015 with a $260 million acquisition of Misfit, a tech platform created by former Microsoft researcher Sonny Vu and onetime Apple chief executive John Sculley.

Research firm IDC estimates that global shipments of wearable devices will hit 125.3 million units in 2018, up 8.5 per cent from 2017, and that the market will grow 11 per cent through 2022 as a result of the growing popularity of smartwatches and greater wearables adoption in emerging markets.