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Tuesday, July 25th, 2017

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    12:00p
    Digital Realty: How to Survive a Market Meltdown and Come Out on Top

    To Bill Stein, CEO of Digital Realty Trust, one of the world’s two largest data center providers, few things are better for a company in Digital’s line of business than a market crisis the company is well prepared for.

    “Having gone through a few financial disruptions in the past, I think you always have to manage your balance sheet. Not only defensively, but with the recognition that when that next crisis happens, you want to be in a position to take an advantage,” Stein said in an interview for The Data Center Podcast. (Stream or download the podcast below)

    The two big market disruptions in Digital’s history were the dotcom bust of the early 2000s and the global financial crisis of 2008. The first was to an extent responsible for it becoming the company it is today; the second helped it grow while most of its competitors were busy just trying to stay afloat.

    While they were meltdowns of different nature, both crises resulted in lots of low-cost data center assets on the market, as companies were trying to slim down their balance sheets; and in both instances Digital was a rare player with the capital to take advantage of the situation.

    Digital Realty didn’t actually exist as a stand-alone company in the early 2000s. It was a portfolio of data centers and office buildings owned by GI Partners, which the private equity firm beefed up during the dotcom crash by buying assets on the cheap from distressed companies.

    GI spun the portfolio off in an IPO in 2004, forming Digital Realty and bringing Stein on board as CFO to help facilitate the float. He became CEO 10 years later, replacing the company’s founding chief executive, Michael Foust.

    Fast-forward to today, and Digital is facing a very different market, where hyper-scale cloud providers are expanding at unprecedented rates, gobbling up data center capacity many megawatts at a time; while smaller cloud players, the likes of IBM and Oracle, are also investing billions in cloud data center expansion.

    As it competes for these deals, Digital is also helping along the wave of consolidation that’s been rolling through the still-fragmented market. It’s made three blockbuster deals in recent years, all transformational for the business. They were the acquisitions of Telx and of a portfolio of TelecityGroup and Equinix properties from Equinix in Europe, and most recently the DuPont Fabros Technology deal, which put Digital firmly ahead of all other publicly traded data center players as a provider of space and power for hyper-scale cloud and social networking companies in North America.

    We recorded this podcast in May, before the DuPont Fabros deal was announced, so we did not get comment from Stein on that particular acquisition. (You can read our coverage and analysis of the deal here and here.) But we did pick his brain about Digital Realty’s history, its acquisition strategy, the forces that are shaping the market today, and many other things.

    Here it is, The Data Center Podcast, featuring Bill Stein, CEO of Digital Realty Trust:

    Download or stream on SoundCloud

    Stream right here:

    Listen on Stitcher:

    6:31p
    Google Says It’s Closing More Big Enterprise Cloud Deals than Ever

    Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said the company’s subsidiary Google saw “impressive growth” in its public cloud infrastructure services business in the second quarter, illustrated by the number of high-value deals it closed with big customers.

    Google Cloud Platform is doing more and more business with “large enterprise customers in regulated sectors,” he told analysts on the company’s earnings call Monday. “To be more specific about our momentum with big customers, in Q2 the number of new deals we closed worth more than $0.5 million is three times what it was last year.”

    This is an important signal to send for Google, which is fighting to prove itself in the enterprise cloud market, dominated by Amazon Web Services and, to a much lesser extent, by Microsoft Azure. That it’s closing more customers in regulated sectors is a signal that GCP can be trusted to handle sensitive data owned by companies primarily in the insurance, financial services, and healthcare industries, as well as government agencies. Organizations in these sectors are governed by much stricter security and privacy regulations than others, which is often the reason they prefer to store data in their own data centers rather than in the cloud.

    See also: VMware, AWS Mulling Joint Data Center Software Product

    Like its biggest cloud competitors, Google has been investing billions every quarter in building data centers to support its cloud services, and second quarter wasn’t much different. It launched new cloud regions in Northern Virginia, Singapore, Sydney, and London in the second quarter.

    Google invested $2.8 billion in production equipment, facilities, and data center construction during the quarter, Ruth Porat, Alphabet CFO, said on the call. The bucket of operational expenditures Alphabet reports as “other cost of revenue,” which includes the cost of operating Google data centers and content acquisition costs (mostly YouTube content), grew 27 percent year over year, totaling $5.3 billion in Q2. It’s unclear what portion of that Google spent on data center operations.

    Pichai, who the company announced will be joining Alphabet’s board of directors, also highlighted a partnership Google made during the quarter with Nutanix, one of the top hyperconverged infrastructure vendors. The deal is aimed at capturing more enterprise business, as the partners plan to make Nutanix’s systems, usually deployed in companies’ own data centers, easily connected and interoperable with GCP.

    The partnership is meant to enable customers to “run workloads in hybrid environments, on-prem and in the cloud, using containers and Kubernetes,” Pichai said.

    Read more: Google Hopes Nutanix Can Unlock the Enterprise Data Center for Its Cloud Business

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