Businesses have pretty much always worked this way. If you accept that efficiencies of scale are a thing, that network effects are real, and that capital breeds capital, then you pretty much arrive at the conclusion that capitalist systems will tend to grow towards consolidation and concentration of power. Disruption is always a thing - corporations are still run by humans and still subject to some weaknesses of human judgement, but concentration of capital and power will tend to feedback on itself.
For example, take a look at the list of brands owned by P&G and Johnson&Johnson.
Calculation problems are a thing too, though. A huge corporation is still central planning, which isn't very efficient. That's why disruption happens, at a large scale there's a lot more room for error. That is, if they really are subject to market forces, which is always a good thing to question.
Well, it's possible that they recognize that market capitalizations of tech companies are a little saturated right now given their sources of revenue and growth plans. So while your stock is overvalued, one of the best ways you can take advantage of it is making stock-heavy acquisitions (even if the deal is 50/50 cash-stock, it helps when your stock is valued at $550 a share). How else could they take advantage of high stock valuations in the short term?
Good point. It kills me,however, when people quote a stock price when they really should talk about market cap. Stock prices are basically arbitrary unless you consider shares outstanding.
Once you're a front runner in a given market sector, it's often more efficient to buy up smaller companies to gain valuable intellectual property and future revenue streams than it is to rely solely on inhouse R&D. These types of acquisition sprees are extremely common, especially with companies like Google that are flush with cash.
A future open technology sounds nice doesn't it? The only issue here then is making sure resources are distributed, managed and organized in a kind way.
This along with the anti-headhunting collusion, sprawling campuses puts me in mind of a Gibsonian future ruled by a handful corporate arcologies [0].
Has business always operated this way and I'm only now noticing because it's happening closer to home?
0: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcology