Tag Archive for Mergers and Acquisition

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

VC Buys Sophos – Start of Bubble?

Cyber-security firm SophosVC Buys Sophos - Start of Bubble? has been acquired by private equity firm Thoma Bravo for $3.9 billion. The firms disclosed the deal on Oct 14, 2019. Sophos Group (SOPH.L) was founded in 1985 and is a FTSE 250 company. The cybersecurity firm is based in Abingdon near Oxford and employs 3,400 people. Sophos has 400,000 clients around the world including Pixar, Ford, Under Armour, Northrop Grumman, and Toshiba.

Sophos logoThe Sophos board accepted the deal and would unanimously recommend the offer from Thoma Bravo. The deal is subject to shareholder approval. Some speculate that the timing of the deal is to take advantage of the pound’s weakness around BREXIT.

The deal continues Thoma Bravo’s buying spree gathering technology companies that offer cybersecurity and business management tools. Thoma Bravo also has ownership stakes in cyber-security firms Barracuda Networks, Imperva, McAfee, and Veracode and remote managing and management (RMM) firms ConnectWise, Continuum, SolarWinds, and LogRhythm, among others. It is the first acquisition outside the U.S. for the Chicago-based buyout firm.

Thoma Bravo logoThe Sophos acquisition is one of many transactions affecting the endpoint security market, which is consolidating. Rik Turner, the principal analyst at Ovum, told Dark Reading, “There are probably too many vendors coming at this market in different ways, so a degree of simplification is in order.

Among some of the notable endpoint deals thus far are VMware‘s acquisition of Carbon Black, Blackberry‘s purchase of Cylance, and HP’s acquisition of Bromium, for example.

Bubble burstSo the question is the cybersecurity space in a bubble? Have valuations and VC investments grown too rich? TechCrunch recently wrote that security may be in a bubble, but it is not about to burst. Here are the arguments they laid out.

TechCrunch explains the bubble part of the equation is building:

The landscape of cybersecurity solutions and services is strikingly saturated. Still, this busy frontier continues to attract founders and investors alike, with 300+ new startups launching every year and VCs investing in cybersecurity at a record high of $5.3 billion in 2018. Further, many cybersecurity startups are able to raise large rounds of funding, with exceedingly high valuations, despite having little market traction.

However, the demand side of the equation is also growing and shifting according to TechCrunch:

The global cybersecurity market is booming: Cybersecurity-related spending is on track to surpass $133 billion in 2022, and the market has grown more than 30x in 13 years. Moreover, security is often integrated into new business initiatives and used as a competitive advantage.

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The dot bomb eraI wonder what the looming Trump trade-war-induced recession will do to the cyber-security bubble. We know that consolidator means job losses and recessions men more jobs are lost. To quote the great American philosopher Yogi Bera – It’s déjà vu all over again for those of us who lived thru Webvan and dot-bomb.

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  • What Happens To Enterprises If the Cybersecurity Bubble Pops? (ITSP Magazine)

 

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.

Symantec Sold

Updated 01/08/2020 – Broadcom is selling off parts Symantec less than 2 months after closing the deal. Reports have consulting giant Accenture buying Symantec’s Cyber Security Services unit for an undisclosed amount.

Under the deal, Accenture will take over Symantec’s global network of six security operations centers located in the U.S., the U.K., India, Australia, Singapore, and Japan. The SOC’s provide threat monitoring, analysis, and incident response services. Accenture says it will use the Symantec business unit to boost its managed security services.

Updated 09/17/2019 – As predicted below, Symantec has started slashing jobs. According to reports, up to 230 Symantec employees will be terminated on October 15, 2019.

Symantec SoldI could have saved a bunch of people a bunch of money– IF you had read this post – you would already have a doubt about this deal – before professional prognosticators Forester said the same thing on August 9th. In their report analyzing the deal, the market researcher cited Intel’s 2010 acquisition of McAfee and subsequent $3 billion loss spinning the security company to private equity in 2016. They said the deal should serve as a warning to CISO’s about the future of Symantec’s product portfolio under Broadcom. Well NO DUH

Broadcom (AVGO) has acquired Symantec‘s (SYMC) enterprise security business for $10.7 billion in cash. The two firms consummated their hot-and-cold bromance M&A discussions in writing today (08/08/2018).

Symantec logoThe deal is expected to bring in over $2 billion in annual revenue for the San Jose, CA-base firm. Broadcom intends to fund the transaction with proceeds from new committed debt financing. The transaction is expected to close in Q1 of Broadcom’s fiscal year 2020.

Broadcom, historically a semiconductor business has been on an M&A tear in the past few years, buying its way into a broader market position. First, with the 2016 – $5.9 billion purchase of network equipment vendor Brocade. Next was the 2018 – $18.9 billion acquisition of CA Technologies. Followed by today’s $10.7 billion pick-up of Symantec. In the presser Broadcom CEO Hock Tan called the Symantec purchase, “... the next logical step in our strategy … expanding our footprint of mission-critical infrastructure software within our core Global 2000 customer base.

Broadcom logoRumors of the purchase first appeared in the press on July 03, 2019, with “advanced talks” happening on July 15th for purchase all of Symantec for $22 Billion, but by July 15, Symantec had reportedly walked away from the table. Reports (which appear to be true) at the time were that Broadcom was after just the enterprise-cybersecurity software business; leaving the consumer the business as an independent company or a spin-off to somebody else.

ChannelE2E says the potential deal makes sense on paper. Broadcom is known for acquiring struggling or slow-growth enterprise technology businesses, stripping out costs and boosting profitability. They explain that Broadcom’s secret to M&A success is clearly communicating staff reduction plans to acquired businesses, investors, and associated end customers. Broadcom is known for swift M&A staff cuts that include reasonable severance packages for employees — rather than long, drawn-out, torturous headcount reductions.

ChannelE2E also correctly predicted the Symantec team could face job cuts, layoffs, or potential business spin-offs as a result of the deal. Right on queue, Symantec announced layoffs of roughly 7% of its more than 11,000 employees during FY 2020. The company also plans to downsize, vacate or close certain facilities and data centers in connection with the restructuring plan.

The Symantec name will be sold to Broadcom as part of the transaction. Interim Symantec CEO Rick Hill said the remaining consumer business contributed 90% of the company’s total operating income, and the company expects to be able to continue to grow revenue for its Norton LifeLock business in the mid-single digits going forward. CEO Hill tried to spin the sale as a win in a presser.

This is a transformative transaction that should maximize immediate value to our shareholders while maintaining ownership in a pure play consumer cyber safety business with predictability, growth and strong consistent profitability.

Symantec SoldSymantec’s struggles in recent years which may have lead to the buy-out are chronicled by Channele2e. Former CEO Greg Clark resigned in May 2019 amid weak enterprise cybersecurity software revenues. Executive team departures over the past year have also included Symantec’s CFO, chief operating officer, chief marketing officer and the head of its go-to-market teams. Board member Rick Hill has been interim president and CEO of the company since that time.

Symantec was late to cloud-and mobile-centric cybersecurity services, and faced intense competition from next-generation endpoint protection providers, including:

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Deja Vu All Over Again

Deja Vu All Over Again

The sense of deja-vu all over again you are experiencing is real. Intel and McAfee tried this nearly a decade ago. Intel purchased top Symantec competitor McAfee for $7.7 billion. The expected “synergies” (WTF that means) never materialized. Intel ended up spinning off McAfee to private equity firm TPG in a 2016 sale that valued the business at $4.2 billion.

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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.

Security Vendor Consolidation Continues

Security Vendor Consolidation ContinuesThe private equity firm Thoma Bravo, LLC has announced (10/11/2018) they are acquiring NASDAQ traded cybersecurity firm Imperva for $55.75 per share in cash. Imperva develops DDoS protection (Incapsula), database security, (SecureSphere), and Breach prevention (CounterBreach) product lines — which protect websites, applications, APIs, and databases from cyberattacks while ensuring compliance.

ImpervaFor its third quarter of 2018, Imperva expects to generate revenues of $90.0 million to $92.0 million, the company revealed. The $21.B purchase further consolidates the PE firm’s role in the cybersecurity software and technology market. Thoma Bravo most recently purchased Barracuda Networks and owns a number of other software and technology firms including:

The purchase is not a done deal yet. The merger agreement provides for a 45-day “go-shop” period, during which Imperva’s Board and advisors may actively seek alternative acquisition proposals and enter into negotiations with other parties, the announcement disclosed.

Under terms of the Thoma Bravo deal, Imperva will delist and operate as a privately held company. The firm will keep its corporate headquarters in Redwood Shores, California, and continue to be led by its current executive team, both companies indicated.

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Thoma Bravo is acquiring quite a tech portfolio.

Most recently they bought Apttus Corp., a contract lifecycle and digital commerce solution provider. Their portfolio has included brands such as:

 

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.

Is Toshiba Screwed?

Is Toshiba Screwed?The tortuous auction of  the covted Toshiba NAND chip fab has finally wrapped. You would think that after over nine months of bidding and 2 trillion yen ($17.7 billion) the victors would like to gloat. A win of that size would be celebrated, but nooo….

The winning partners lead by venture capitalist Bain Capital and Apple can’t even agree on when to hold a presser to announce their purchase. The consortium had planned a presser for 09-28-2017, which was abruptly canceled just minutes before it was due to begin according to reports. Reuters reports that “…the consortium could not form a consensus on whether to brief media.”

PangeaOne wrinkle may be that Apple (AAPL) has demanded new terms on its chip supply for the new iPhones. In addition to Apple, Bain’s consortium “Pangea” includes Japan’s Hoya Corporation, South Korea’s SK Hynix, and U.S. investors Kingston TechnologySeagate Technology (STX), and Dell Technologies Capital.- all of which want access to NAND technology.

Under the deal, Toshiba will have 40.2 percent of voting rights in the chip unit and Hoya will own 9.9 percent. The four U.S. tech firms will not have voting rights.

Besides internal strife, the sale also faces legal challenges from Western Digital (WDC), Toshiba’s chip venture partner, and rejected suitor, which is seeking an injunction to block any deal that does not have its consent.

Western Digital logoWestern Digital, one of the world’s leading makers of hard disk drives, paid some $16 billion last year to acquire SanDisk, Toshiba’s chip joint venture partner since 2000. It sees chips as a key pillar of growth and is desperate to keep the business out of the hands of rival chipmakers.

Bain has also announced that it plans to take Pangea public by 2020.

 

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.