The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Broadcom buys business software firm CA for US$18.9 bln

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SAN FRANCISCO: Semi-conductor giant Broadcom, which recently failed in a bid to buy US rival Qualcomm, announced a cash deal to buy software and services firm CA Technologi­es for US$18.9 billion.

Broadcom described CA as a major provider of informatio­n technology management software, in an acquisitio­n that would help the chip maker diversify its offerings.

“This transactio­n represents an important building block as we create one of the world’s leading infrastruc­ture technology companies,” Broadcom chief executive Hock Tan said in a release.

The deal was approved by the boards of both companies.

Broadcom will pay US$44.50 per share of CA stock; about 20 per cent over the closing price for common shares at the end of formal market trading on Wednesday, according to the company.

“We are excited to have reached this definitive agreement with Broadcom,” CA Technologi­es chief Mike Gregoire said in the joint release.

“This combinatio­n aligns our expertise in software with Broadcom’s leadership in the semiconduc­tor industry.”

The companies expected the acquisitio­n to close in the final quarter of this year. The merger must be approved by shareholde­rs and regulators.

Broadcom in April transferre­d its headquarte­rs from Singapore to the US as promised when it tried to buy Qualcomm.

The prior month, President Donald Trump issued an order barring the proposed US$117 billion hostile takeover of Qualcomm, citing what he called “credible evidence” such a deal “threatens to impair the national security of the United States.”

It would have been the biggesteve­r deal in the tech sector.

Trump’s order made no mention of China, but an earlier letter from the US Treasury Department warned that a takeover might hurt US leadership in 5G, super-fast fifth-generation wireless networks now being deployed, and consequent­ly pose a threat to US security.

The presidenti­al action was allowed because Broadcom is a foreign entity, but would not have been possible had it completed its move to Silicon Valley.

On March 14, Broadcom said it was withdrawin­g its offer for Qualcomm.

Broadcom was founded in California but moved its headquarte­rs after a 2015 deal that merged it with Avago Technologi­es. — AFP

 ??  ?? Semi-conductor giant Broadcom, which recently failed in a bid to buy US rival Qualcomm, announced a cash deal to buy software and services firm CA Technologi­es for US$18.9 billion. — AFP photo
Semi-conductor giant Broadcom, which recently failed in a bid to buy US rival Qualcomm, announced a cash deal to buy software and services firm CA Technologi­es for US$18.9 billion. — AFP photo

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