The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Broadcom planning blockbuste­r tech deal

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“We look for businesses with a strong market position and can be made more profitable.” Hock Tan

NEW YORK: Broadcom Inc is in talks to acquire cloud-computing company Vmware Inc, according to people familiar with the matter, setting up a blockbuste­r tech deal that would vault the chipmaker into a highly specialise­d area of software.

The discussion­s are ongoing and there’s no guarantee they will lead to a purchase, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter isn’t public.

Vmware currently has a market valuation of about Us$40bil (Rm176bil).

Assuming a typical premium, the potential deal price would be higher, though the terms under considerat­ion couldn’t be learned.

The transactio­n would extend a run of acquisitio­ns for Broadcom chief executive officer Hock Tan, who has built one of the largest and most diversifie­d companies in the chip industry.

Software has been a key focus in recent years, with Broadcom buying CA Technologi­es in 2018 and Symantec Corp’s enterprise security business in 2019.

A representa­tive for Vmware declined to comment. A representa­tive for Broadcom wasn’t available for comment.

Broadcom makes a wide range of electronic­s, with its products going into everything from the iphone to industrial equipment. But data centres have become a critical source of growth and bulking up on software gives the company more ways to target that market.

Broadcom was previously in talks to acquire SAS Institute Inc, a closely held software company valued at Us$15bil to Us$20bil (Rm66bil to Rm88bil). But those discussion­s ended last year without a deal.

Tan also was thwarted in his biggest takeover attempt – a bid to buy rival chipmaker

Qualcomm Inc. He had to walk away from that deal in 2018 after Broadcom encountere­d resistance from the Trump administra­tion.

One concern was Broadcom’s Singapore headquarte­rs and the company has since switched its domicile to the United States. It is now based in San Jose, California, about 20 miles from Vmware’s Palo Alto headquarte­rs.

Vmware, founded in 1998, is a pioneering Silicon Valley entity that has already changed hands a number of times.

It invented so-called virtualisa­tion software, which consolidat­ed applicatio­ns and workloads on a smaller number of server computers by using each server to handle more than one programme.

But as more tasks moved to the cloud, Vmware struggled to keep up growth and carve out a key role for itself. The company eventually forged a close partnershi­p with Amazon.com Inc, one of the biggest providers of cloud storage and services.

Vmware was acquired by storage technology giant EMC Corp in 2004.

That company then sold part of its stake as part of Vmware’s initial public offering three years later. The business passed to Dell Technologi­es Inc when that company acquired EMC in 2016. Vmware then spun off from Dell last year.

Michael Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake remain top investors in Vmware, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Software would help decrease Broadcom’s reliance on chips. But its previous forays into that market haven’t always been applauded by investors.

Tan has argued that he looks for businesses that are “franchises” – ones that hold a strong market position and can be made more profitable without pouring in huge investment­s.

Shares of Broadcom and Vmware have both slid roughly 18% this year, hurt by a broader rout.

But they haven’t been hit as hard as many tech stocks.

The Philadelph­ia Stock Exchange Semiconduc­tor Index is down 27% this year.

Vmware rose 0.8% to close at US$95.71 (RM420) in New York trading on Friday, putting its market valuation at Us$40.3bil (Rm177bil).

Broadcom, down less than 1% to US$543.19 (RM2,385) on Friday, has a valuation of about Us$222bil (Rm975bil).

Chipmakers like Broadcom have enjoyed booming sales in recent years, fuelled by the spread of semiconduc­tors into more products – as well as by the need for work-from-home technology during the pandemic.

But Tan has warned that the boom times probably won’t last. Even after giving an upbeat sales forecast in March, Tan said that the semiconduc­tor industry won’t be able to

Bloomberg* stay on its current trajectory. —

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