Will the NSA Spying Revelations Hurt America’s Nascent Cyberforensics Industry Abroad?

Mandiant's chief security officer Richard Bejtlich has many connections.

Mandiant's chief security officer Richard Bejtlich has many connections. Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Exporting this lucrative corner of the American tech scene might not be so easy.

The barrage of recent hacking attempts against businesses and institutions has given birth to a new US growth industry: cyber-forensics. But with the US government’s own espionage activities now fueling a new climate of international cyber-paranoia, exporting this lucrative corner of the American tech scene might not be so easy.

FireEye, a network security company based in Silicon Valley, on Thursday struck a deal to buy its Virginia-based counterpart Mandiant for about $1 billion. It’s a lofty price, representing about 10 times Mandiant’s annual revenue, but investors don’t seem to mind: FireEye’s shares surged by about 24% this morning.

Part of the rationale for the tie-up between the two companies is to “increase global scale” and create an international market leader in the industry. Mandiant is very much a US-focused business: less than 5% of its sales are from offshore markets, and a third of the Fortune 100 are already customers. In contrast, FireEye already has a presence in more than 40 countries, and its international revenue, which accounts for about 15% of its top line, is growing at nearly three times the pace of its US business.

Read the full story at Quartz.