Tag Archive for Layoffs

Xerox May Buy HP

Updated 02/27/2020 HP has returned fire on the heels of beating Wall Street expectations for ‘Q1 20. HP announced a “value creation plan” to return $16 billion to shareholders to fight the hostile takeover bid from Xerox. This will come in the form of HP stock buybacks and dividends powered in part by cost-cutting.

But Xerox has not backed down and plans to launch a tender offer starting “on or around” March 2, which will ask all HP shareholders to sell their shares to Xerox.

There is now speculation that HP could buy out Xerox.

Updated 02/10/2020 Xerox has fired another salvo in its hostile take-over attempt of HP. CNBC is reporting that Xerox has boosted its offer for HP Inc. to $34 billion (from $22 to $24 a share). A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.

___

Updated 01/24/2020 – “People familiar with the matter” are saying the HP share-holder Xerox plans to nominate up to 11 people to the 12-person HP Inc. board of directors as the next step in its hostile takeover bid of HP, 2019’s global PC sales leader.

In response, HP publicly called out billionaire activist shareholder Carl Icahn. In a presser, HP claimed Mr. Icahn’s interests were not aligned with those of other HP shareholders.“Due to Mr. Icahn’s ownership position, he would disproportionately benefit from an acquisition of HP by Xerox at a price that undervalues HP.” Mr. Icahn owns about 11% of Xerox and a representative for Icahn wasn’t immediately available for comment to Yahoo.

Updated 12/10/2019 – And the story goes on – Xerox CEO John Visentin is meeting with some HP shareholders to walk them through the key points of the proposed acquisition. In what it describes as “undisputed” logic. ZDNet has some of the slides.

___

Updated 11/25/2019 – This morning, HP rejected Xerox’s follow-up demand to either agree to formal merger talks otherwise, Xerox would present a “compelling case” for a buy-out directly to HP shareholders. Seems a proxy fight is brewing with activist contrarian investor Carl Icahn holding shares on both sides of the deal.

___

Updated 11/17/2019 –  HP’s Board of Directors has unanimously rejected Xerox’s bid to acquire HP. But, HP did not completely shut down Xerox’s efforts to merge the two aging tech giants.

___

Xerox May Buy HPHP inc. could be bought out on the heels of its second round of layoffs in 15 months. According to reports, Xerox (XRX) sent a buyout proposal to HP Inc. on November 5. The PC giant confirmed the offer on 11/06/2019. HP issued a vague statement that reads in part;

Xerox logo… we have had conversations with Xerox Holdings Corporation (XRX) from time to time about a potential business combination. … We have a record of taking action if there is a better path forward and will continue to act with deliberation, discipline, and an eye towards what is in the best interest of all our shareholders.

The ambiguous HP (HPQ) statement may be a ploy to bring additional bidders to the negotiating table. Norwalk, CT-based Xerox is reportedly backed by Citigroup Inc. CRN reports that Xerox is set to gain $2.3 billion by selling its 25% stake in the Fujifilm Xerox joint venture.

HP logoBloomberg claims that remaining independent is only going to become more difficult for both HP and Xerox. Gartner predicts that global printer shipments set to decline by 2% annually through 2023. Teaming up would reduce costs and competition in the segments where they overlap; HP is generally stronger in the market for smaller printers, while Xerox holds the lead in larger ones. That could boost profitability even as revenue stagnates.

A Xerox-HP merger would result in significant job reductions around the world as the new company would seek to cut costs through the elimination of back-end costs associated with supply chain, finance, HR, and other OPEX expenses. The impact on the two companies’ respective channels would be most felt in the printer segment, where there’s the greatest overlap. Another likely outcome is the spin-off of HP’s 3D printing division, which is not core to either of the companies.

So how did we get here? Xerox is still finding its way after splitting from its professional services business in 2016, which formed the new business Conduent, and the failed merger with FujiFilm in 2018. Xerox relies on a dying business for the bulk of its sales and profit. It sells and services copy machines and printers, primarily for corporations. But sales are falling, declining for the past seven quarters.

HP announced plans to reduce headcount by as much as 9,000, or 16% of its 55,000 employees. The staff reductions, through layoffs and voluntary early retirement, are expected to be completed by the fiscal year 2022. In June 2018, the company laid off 5,000 employees over several months.

HP's struggles in the printer and printer supplies businessWhile HP appears to be holding its own in the PC space — both Gartner and IDC place HP Inc. in second place behind Lenovo for unit shipments as of this 2019 Q2. HP’s ongoing struggles in the printer and printer supplies business, where HP has long been the market leader, has been under stress from third-party suppliers selling toner and ink at significantly lower prices. Reports are that HP’s printer business accounts for a whopping 75% of its total profits and roughly half of its total revenues.

Xerox started in 1906 as the Haloid Photographic Co. The photographic supply company in Rochester, NY, paved its way to mega-success in March 1960, when it shipped its first office copier. The Haloid Xerox contraption was the size of two washing machines and weighed 648 pounds. It also occasionally caught on fire. The Xerox copier’s core technology -— a process called xerography, invented by Chester Carlson — is still widely used in copy machines five decades later.

HP traces its origins to 1938 when Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard rented a garage in Palo Alto, CA. That year, they invented their first product: the HP Model 200A, an audio oscillator used to test sound equipment. The company became the pioneer of Silicon Valley, building its first computer in 1966 and the famous HP-35 in 1972 — the world’s first hand-held scientific calculator. Hewlett-Packard, split into two companies in 2014. HP Inc. got printers and PCs. HP Enterprise got servers and enterprise software.

rb-
Marketwatch has some good data on why these firms are planning to hook up. They write that globally consumers will print 210 billion pages, down 20% from 2015. In 2018, U.S. consumers printed an average of 38.4 pages a month, down 40 pages per month in 2017. In addition to printing less, U.S. consumers have purchased 11% fewer inkjet printers so far in 2019.

Related article

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

HPE Been Busy

HPE Been BusyHP (HPQ) has been busy since it divorced itself and spawned HP Enterprise and HP Inc. There has been more enterprise activity in the past month than in the past years, as the spun-out HP Enterprise (HPE) side of the tech megalith tries to make a more relevant name for itself.

HPE layoffs

HP Enterprise logoFirst, Tim Stonesifer the CFO of the new HPE says that up to another 30,000 people will be laid off. The Business Insider reports these cuts will be focused on HP’s Enterprise Services Division, the consulting arm of the company.

During CEO Meg Whitman‘s tenure, HP has let go 85,000 workers with this latest round of layoffs. And they aren’t over yet claims CIO.com. Ms. Whitman and CFO Cathie Lesjak said that HP would lay off another 5% of staff.

Michigan lawsuit

State of Michigan is suing HPMore bad news as the State of Michigan announced it is suing HP. Michigan’s Secretary of State Ruth Johnson is charging HP with failing to deliver on a $49 million contract after 10 years, according to a press release from the state.

FierceCIO reports that the project was supposed to replace a legacy mainframe system that has run 131 Secretary of State offices. However, since 2005, and after $27.5 million was paid to the company, the state said that not a single promised function was delivered. In the press release she states:

 I inherited a stalled project when I came into office in 2011 and, despite our aggressive approach to hold HP accountable and ensure they delivered, they failed … We have no choice but to take HP to court to protect Michigan taxpayers.

MichiganThe state alleged that following a set of failed negotiations over the past few months, it rescinded its contract on Aug. 28 with a termination for cause letter. The article says the state argued, according to the terms of the contract, HP was supposed to provide support services for the state for some extended period of time. The state said that, instead, HP employees stopped reporting as of Aug. 31.

HP responded to a request for comment from FierceCIO with the following email statement: “It’s unfortunate that the state of Michigan chose to terminate the contract, but HP looks forward to a favorable resolution in court.

HPE 3PAR

On the product side, HPE has updated the software that runs all of its HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage products to boost the performance of its SAN and other storage products an HP presser announced.

HP 3Par logoOne of the changes to the HP 3PAR Operating System. HP has added a new feature in the HP 3PAR Priority Optimization software. Fierce Enterprise Communications reports that the software now enables users to set specific latency goals as low as 0.5 milliseconds in the hopes of ensuring consistent performance levels in multi-tenant environments. The intention is to boost the quality of service for improved application performance.

VMware support

For data protection, HPE also added support for VMware (VMW) vSphere 6.0 with VMware Virtual Volumes to StoreOnce Recovery Manager Central for VMware. The update also includes more granular recovery of individual virtual machines and files, simplifying data recovery.

VMWareWith these changes, another Fierce Enterprise Communications article observes that HP is getting cozier in its relationship with VMware as the company unveiled new consulting and support services for VMware’s NSX SDN product.

There’s actually a laundry list of new aspects of the two companies’ partnership, according to the article. The partnership includes a variety of HP services and products that tie into different VMware software-defined data center and end-user computing products, but the networking aspect comes in the form of HP Network Virtualization Services.

Consulting The consulting and support services will be available starting in January 2016. According to an HP announcement at VMworld, the services were “designed to transform and operate the network when combining physical and virtual network resources, functionality and management to ready a network for virtualized cloud, network functions virtualization or SDI.”

HP plans to implement a novel idea by putting consulting and support services under the HP Network Virtualization Services umbrella to provide a 24/7/365 single place to connect with networking, virtualization, and NSX experts in the hopes of quickly resolving issues.

Security changes

HP Fortify logoOn the security front, HP announced new enterprise security tools that can detect communications between malware and a remote server as well as uncover bugs in enterprise software using machine learning.

The first called HP DNS Malware Analytics, uses an algorithm to detect enterprise machines infected with malware by analyzing Domain Name System traffic between the devices and remote servers according to a FierceCIO article. A one-year subscription to HP DMA starts at $80,000 to analyze up to 5 million DNS packets per day. Frank Mong, vice president of solutions at HP Security, claims, “This solves the problem of finding an infected host that has been missed by anti-virus and endpoint security”.

HP also introduced HP Fortify scan analytics, machine-learning technology, as part of HP Fortify on Demand, which uses an enterprise’s app security data to improve the accuracy and efficiency of app security. This technology integrates into existing app security testing workflows, increasing the efficiency of the app security audit process and the relevancy of findings, HP explained.

rb-

Color me skeptical but I’m not sure that HP is the best horse for VMware to bet on in their battle with former partner Cisco (CSCO).

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Santa Laid-Off in NY

Santa Laid-Off in NYThe global depression recession economic event has now effected Santa Claus. Yahoo News reports that when faced with balancing the budget in New York’s Suffolk County the politicians decided to lay off Santa Claus to balance their budget.

The Suffolk County executive said he could not justify spending $660 of his $2.7 billion budget to pay Santa according to Yahoo. David McKell, 83, a World War II veteran and former homicide detective has donned his Santa suit for the last ten years to greet children on Long Island.

Steve Levy, the Republican County Executive’s answer was to laying off Santa was typically Republican, “Let either the private sector come forward with a donation, or, better yet, let’s tap the volunteers in the community.Santa

Levy was quickly called a Grinch by his opponents. “Do we really have to hold Santa Claus hostage to balance the budget?” Bill Lindsay, a Democrat, and the presiding officer of the county legislature told Yahoo.

I mean, $600? Give me a break,” Joseph Sawicki, a Republican who as county comptroller is charged with overseeing the county government’s fiscal prudence, said in an interview. “There comes a point where you go overboard in terms of penny-pinching.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Cisco to Cut 11,500 Workers

Cisco to Cut 11,500 Workers Cisco‘s (CSCO) two consecutive under-performing quarters finally prompted CEO John Chambers to take action. One of the first actions Cisco will undertake during reorganization is to sell a set-top box manufacturing plant in Juarez, Mexico. FierceEnterpriseCommunications reports that Cisco will sell the plant to Foxconn Technology Group, The plant has about 5,000 workers who likely will remain as employees of Terry Gou according to FierceEnterpriseCommunications.

Cisco logoIn addition, the embattled CEO vowed $1 billion in cuts this year to Cisco’s expenses. Mr. Chambers announced plans to cut its workforce by 11,500. Cisco said about 975, or 15 percent, would be executives with job titles of vice president or above. A Cisco spokesperson said the employee reductions announced would be enough to reach the $1 billion cost-cutting target Chambers set in May.

Foxconn logoGleacher & Co. analyst Brian Marshall told FierceEnterpriseCommunications that the staff reductions were a good first step for Cisco, but he added that the remaining questions, e.g. how Cisco would fix the top line and drive revenue growth and product innovations, need answers.

rb-

I wrote about Foxxcom’s expansion into the Americas here. This also looks like another step in the de-consumerization of the Cisco product line.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

AOL Notes

AOL NotesAOL was once the leader in online service providers in the U.S.and around the world. In 1988 America Online (AOL) came alive and legendary CEO Steve Case took charge in 1991. In 1996, AOL reached 6 million subscribers and started offering a flat-rate monthly service fee of $19.95. In January of 2000, AOL decided to buy up Time Warner Inc. which was spun out again in 2009.

AOL Wasn’t Building Great Products

AOL Wasn't Building Great ProductsA report from BusinessInsider says that AOL (AOL) wants to refurbish its brand and boost its energy out west. They cite a Bloomberg BusinessWeek story, that AOL is attempting to rebuild its brand by:

* Re-painting its West Coast HQ.
* Opening a gym downstairs.
* Inviting startups to work at the office rent-free.
* Hiring 80 new engineers.
* Throwing ex-AOLers under the bus.

AOL wasn’t building great products, and the brand was reflecting that,” says AOL West Coast boss Brad Garlinghouse. “We have to expunge the ghosts of AOL and start fresh.

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are Back

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are BackThe BusinessInsider speculates now that the top two editors for AOL’s (AOL) powerhouse gadget site Engadget are headed out the door, lots of people think the next thing AOL will do is buy GDGT, the gadget-oriented social network started by Engadget alumni Peter Rojas and Ryan Block.

Through AOL Ventures, AOL already owns a piece of the startup. The buy would probably be one of those “acqui-hires” where GDGT investors are made whole and the founders get what amounts to a signing bonus. comScore tells BusinessInsider that GDGT has been fluctuating between 60,000 and 140,000 unique visitors over the past year.

An AOL/Engadget insider tells BI “that gdgt rumor comes and goes.

Update: GDGT co-founder Peter Rojas says, “I can’t comment, either way, you know the drill.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

America Online (AOL) laid off around 900 people on 03 march 2011 and undoubtedly, it was brutal for those people, and for their friends at the online provider. Unfortunately, layoffs are a long-standing tradition at AOL. Chart of the Day plots the job butcher’s toll of 11 years of AOL layoffs. Sometimes the layoffs are big, sometimes they’re small, but they’re pretty much endless.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDs

AOL Spent More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDsAmerica Online (AOL) used to be king of the dial-up hill. At its peak, over 26.7 million households accessed the Internet via AOL, a figure that no American ISP has ever surpassed according to a report from AOL’s own DownloadSquad. That success came at a cost, though: those CDs (and floppy disks!) that arrived in your letterbox, often on a weekly basis, cost AOL over $300 million.

The data comes from Quora, a service that is fast becoming the go-to place for juicy, ‘insider’ information. Someone asked about AOL’s distribution costs, and in mere moments, both the CEO-at-the-time, Steve Case, and the former Chief Marketing Officer, Jan Brandt, had chimed in with authoritative responses. Mr. Case recalls, that in the heyday of the mid-1990s, AOL was quite content to spend $35 on obtaining a new subscriber. Brandt, responding a bit later, provided a total cost of “over $300 million,” for the distribution of the CDs. She went on to offer a shocking statistic: “At one point, 50% of the CDs produced worldwide had an AOL logo on it.” Shocking, but… sadly rather believable.

Desperate to Hook Up With HuffPost

AOL Was So Desperate to Hook Up With Huffington PostWhen America Online’s (AOL) CEO Tim Armstrong announced the $315-million acquisition of The Huffington Post he made the deal sound like a strategic add-on for the former web portal’s content business however, GigaOm says that AOL had to buy Huffington Post. GigaOm says that AOL traffic has been plummeting and losses increasing at most of its major media properties. GigaOm’s Mathew Ingram cites an Advertising Age report that unique visitors in February 2011 were down by more than 40 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

AOL has tried to reinvent itself as a content company, using the cash its Internet access business continues to produce (which I wrote about here) to buy assets like TechCrunch and video service 5Min Media, and The Huffington Post. GigaOm reports AOL has also spent $100 million on building out its Patch.com hyperlocal news operation with another $120 million this year. GigaOm’s Ingram says AOL is feverishly trying to build new businesses that can replace the ones that are disintegrating, before the cash from its legacy businesses runs out and the company collapses.

Assets like DailyFinance and PoliticsDaily were supposed to be part of the recipe for boosting traffic and advertising but that doesn’t seem to be happening. Mr. Armstrong is quoted in Paid Content that the news and finance sites were losing $20 million a year for the company and advertising revenue reportedly dropped by almost 30 percent in the latest quarter.

At The Huffington Post, meanwhile, both traffic and revenues have climbed. Mr. Ingram concludes that the HuffPost acquisition brings two things to AOL that it desperately needs: an understanding of how much social networks and social features matter to new media, and a sense of personality and brand awareness that AOL sites have failed to generate. Now all Arianna Huffington has to do is somehow graft all of that into AOL.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.