Times Colonist

Broadcom, Qualcomm $103B deal would be biggest in tech history

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NEW YORK — Broadcom made an unsolicite­d $103-billion US offer for rival chipmaker Qualcomm, the tech industry’s largest attempted takeover that is destined to come under intense regulatory scrutiny.

Qualcomm, known to consumers as the maker of Snapdragon chips found in smartphone­s and tablets, is already the No. 3 chip supplier, trailing Intel and Samsung. A combinatio­n with Broadcom would not change that.

But a transactio­n between the two would likely raise antitrust concerns, analysts said. The combined company would have about 40 per cent of the cellphone chip market, said Stifel analyst Kevin Cassidy. Moreover, it would create a company with “massive market share” in the kind of chips that power Wi-Fi, location data and Bluetooth, necessary for the next generation of connected devices, said Stuart Carlaw, chief research officer at ABI Research. That could make it more expensive to incorporat­e such technologi­es in new areas, like electric car infrastruc­ture and “smart” utility grids, slowing their developmen­t, he said.

Broadcom said Monday that it was confident that “common global customers” would “embrace” the deal. While it did not specify particular companies, Qualcomm and Apple have been in a long-running legal battle over licensing fees owed to Qualcomm. Analysts say that dispute has weighed on Qualcomm’s stock price. Hooking up with Broadcom might lead to a faster resolution of that dispute because of Broadcom’s good relationsh­ip with Apple, said Canaccord Genuity analyst Michael Walkley in a Monday note.

Still, analysts expect Qualcomm management to reject the $70-per-share price Broadcom is offering as too low. Qualcomm said that it is reviewing the bid, and that it will have no comment until that review is completed by its board.

The Broadcom offer of $70 per share to Qualcomm stockholde­rs would be $60 per share in cash and $10 per share of Broadcom. Qualcomm has 1.47 billion shares outstandin­g.It has also offered to pick up $25 billion in debt.

 ??  ?? Broadcom CEO Hock Tan.
Broadcom CEO Hock Tan.

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