Ottawa Citizen

Dell $67B EMC deal ‘landmark, historic’

- MAE ANDERSON

Dell is buying data storage company EMC for US$67 billion in a huge bet on a segment of technology that has proven to be more profitable than the slumping personal computer market.

The acquisitio­n announced Monday marks Dell’s latest attempt to lessen its dependence on the PC industry that it helped pioneer as demand for desktop and laptop machines weakens amid the growing popularity of smartphone­s and tablets.

The price makes this the largest deal ever between two technology companies, eclipsing Avago Technologi­es’ proposed US$37-billion acquisitio­n of rival chipmaker Broadcom announced five months ago.

The Dell-EMC union is an illustrati­on of how older technology companies are scrambling to adapt to the upheaval unleashed by Apple’s introducti­on of the trendsetti­ng iPhone eight years ago and the advent of digital services that are hosted in remote data centres so they can be reached by any Internet-connected device.

Since going private in a US $25 billion deal completed in 2013, Dell Inc. has been investing in research and developmen­t and expanding its software and services business as those in the technology industry continue to struggle with soft PC sales.

EMC meanwhile has been shifting from a provider of data-storage hardware such as on-premise data centres to offering a more comprehens­ive suite of products to businesses, from cloud storage to security offerings.

“Our new company will be exceptiona­lly well-positioned for growth in the most strategic areas of next-generation IT including digital transforma­tion, software-defined data centre, converged infrastruc­ture, hybrid cloud, mobile and security,” Michael Dell said.

Dell will serve as chairman and CEO of the combined company. Joe Tucci, chairman and CEO of EMC, will remain in those roles until the deal is complete.

FBR analyst Daniel Ives said the deal means Dell is “no longer your grandma’s PC company.”

“It’s a landmark, historic deal that really brings them into the enterprise market and makes them a behemoth,” Ives wrote in a Monday note.

The deal had been rumoured for weeks. EMC, based in Hopkinton, Mass., makes data-storage equipment and provides other IT services to companies. It also has an 80-per-cent stake in cloudcompu­ting company VM ware Inc., which will stay an independen­t, publicly-traded company.

EMC has been facing tough competitio­n in the storage sector as companies including Amazon, Microsoft and IBM have stepped up cloud storage offerings.

Forrester analyst Glenn O’Donnell said the deal is good news for EMC and its customers.

“Speculatio­n has been somewhat scary for them, but Dell is a trusted player and a low-risk ‘soft landing ’ for these customers,” he said. It’s a good move for Dell too, he added.

“Dell is fairly weak on storage, and EMC will help give it a full portfolio that it needs to compete with HP, Cisco, IBM, and the growing threat from Huawei,” he said.

Shareholde­rs of EMC Corp. will receive about US$33.15 per share, which includes cash plus tracking stock linked to part of EMC’s economic interest in the VMware business. That’s a 19-per-cent premium to EMC’s Friday closing price of US$27.86.

Dell Inc.’s headquarte­rs will stay in Round Rock, Texas. The combined enterprise systems business headquarte­rs will be in Hopkinton.

The deal, which was approved by EMC’s board, is targeted to close in the second or third quarter of Dell’s fiscal year ending Feb. 3, 2017. It still needs approval from EMC shareholde­rs.

Dell, started by Michael Dell in 1984 when he was just a teenager, went on to change the PC business with low costs, customized orders and direct sales first over the phone and later the Internet.

It’s a landmark, historic deal that ... makes them a behemoth.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Traders work near the post that handles EMC Corp. at the NYSE on Monday. EMC shareholde­rs will receive about US$33.15 per share, a 19-per-cent premium to EMC’s Friday closing price.
RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Traders work near the post that handles EMC Corp. at the NYSE on Monday. EMC shareholde­rs will receive about US$33.15 per share, a 19-per-cent premium to EMC’s Friday closing price.

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