Bangkok Post

WINE AND DINE

Xerox Holdings is planning a charm offensive for investor support for its takeover of HP.

- KRYSTAL HU GREG ROUMELIOTI­S

US printer maker Xerox Holdings Corp is hosting a dinner for HP Inc shareholde­rs this week as it seeks investor support to overcome the personal computer maker’s resistance to its $35 billion takeover bid, according to people familiar with the matter.

The charm offensive comes after Xerox raised its cash-and-stock bid for HP last week by $2 to $24 per share ahead of a tender offer it plans to launch in early March.

It is also asking HP shareholde­rs to replace HP’s board directors with Xerox’s nominees at the company’s annual shareholde­r meeting later this year.

HP, whose shares ended on Friday at $22.37, is expected to dismiss the sweetened offer as inadequate when it unveils its most recent quarterly earnings on Feb 24.

It told investors last week it wanted them to have “full informatio­n” on the company before responding publicly to Xerox.

“Xerox has invited some HP shareholde­rs to a dinner at a restaurant in the Riverside neighbourh­ood of Greenwich, Connecticu­t on Feb 18,’’ the sources said.

“Xerox CEO John Visentin is expected to attend,’’ one of the sources added.

Enough HP shareholde­rs backing HP CEO Enrique Lores could embolden the company to remain independen­t or hold out for a better deal.

“Other such meetings are possible in the coming days,’’ said another of the sources, who asked not to be identified because the meeting is confidenti­al.

Xerox and HP did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Xerox has said it expects the combinatio­n with HP, which has four times its market capitaliza­tion of about $8 billion, to yield approximat­ely $2 billion in cost synergies. The two companies focus on compliment­ary segments of the printing market.

The printing industry is in decline as companies and consumers turn to digital documents to save money and help the environmen­t. This has put pressure on companies in the sector to consolidat­e and reverse their revenue decline through acquisitio­ns that can boost their market share.

HP, which separated from servers and networking equipment provider Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Inc in 2015, has participat­ed in this consolidat­ion, acquiring Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd’s printer business for $1.05 billion in 2017.

HP has been reluctant to engage in deal discussion­s with Xerox since November, when the latter launched its takeover campaign after reaching a settlement with Fujifilm Holdings Corp that resolved a legal dispute over their 57-year-old joint venture and a previous attempt to merge, yielding a $2.3 billion after-tax payoff for Xerox.

Lores, previously the president of HP’s imaging, printing and solutions business, also assumed his duties as CEO last November, succeeding Dion Weisler.

HP did negotiate with Xerox last year at the invitation of billionair­e investor Carl Icahn, a top Xerox shareholde­r who has since also acquired a stake in HP, according to the sources.

The talks stalled after the companies failed to agree on the amount of confidenti­al informatio­n they shared with each other, the sources said.

HP relies on its desktop and notebook personal computers business for the majority of its net revenue, but gets the bulk of its earnings from its printing hardware and supplies division.

The company has disputed the value of the cost synergies that Xerox has put forward, and argued that its sale to Xerox would saddle the combined company with too much debt. HP has also raised questions on the impact on Xerox’s supply chain of losing Fujifilm as a partner.

HP is also mindful of large acquisitio­ns given its fateful deal for British software company Autonomy almost a decade ago.

The company bought Autonomy for $11.1 billion in 2011 as the centrepiec­e of its unsuccessf­ul pivot to software. A little over a year later, it wrote off $8.8 billion, $5 billion of which it put down to accounting impropriet­ies, misreprese­ntation and disclosure failures.

Xerox’s stock has rallied under Visentin, a former Hewlett-Packard and IBM Corp executive with ties to the private equity industry who took over as Xerox CEO in 2018.

Thanks to an operationa­l restructur­ing programme dubbed “Project Own It’’, Visentin has managed to take out costs and is seeking to return Xerox to revenue growth by 2021. He has also boosted the company’s stock through share buybacks.

HP has also announced a cost-saving programme worth more than $1 billion that could result in its shedding about 16% of its workforce, or about 9,000 employees, over the next few years.

 ?? AFP ?? In this file photo, the HP logo is seen on a sign at the company’s headquarte­rs in Palo Alto, California.
AFP In this file photo, the HP logo is seen on a sign at the company’s headquarte­rs in Palo Alto, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand