San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BROADCOM SECRETLY EYED VMWARE BEFORE $61B BLOCKBUSTE­R DEAL

- BY LIANA BAKER & MICHELLE F. DAVIS Baker and Davis write for Bloomberg News.

Long before Broadcom sealed a deal to buy Vmware Inc. for $61 billion Thursday, it eyed the company secretly from a distance.

Vmware had been one of the assets at the top of Broadcom’s target list for some time, according to people familiar with the matter, but the suitor quietly scrutinize­d the business before it went further. Broadcom crunched numbers, scoped out Vmware’s products and ran scenarios for about a year before making an approach, said the people, who asked not to identified because the deliberati­ons were private.

Thus began what is set to be the biggest takeover by a chipmaker in history and one of the top tech deals of all time. Thursday’s agreement marries a sprawling semiconduc­tor company with a Silicon Valley software pioneer — a merger few had anticipate­d before Bloomberg broke news of the talks earlier this week. Broadcom plans to make Vmware the linchpin of its software strategy, reducing its reliance on the boomand-bust chip industry.

The courtship started slowly for good reason. Vmware was part of Dell Technologi­es until a spinoff last year. That split, announced in April 2021 and completed Nov. 1, extricated Vmware from Dell and made it more attractive as an acquisitio­n. But Broadcom executives couldn’t act on anything or show their interest until at least six months after the deal closed, the people said.

Tax rules prevent a spunoff company from having M&A conversati­ons for a period of time — lawyers generally advise a six-month window — so Broadcom had to wait until it felt Vmware would be willing to engage.

The talks got going in early May with a phone call from Broadcom Chief Executive Officer Hock Tan to Michael Dell, who had remained the top shareholde­r in Vmware after the spinoff from his computer business.

Tan, a Malaysian-born entreprene­ur who built Broadcom into one of the biggest and most diversifie­d chipmakers, wanted to sound out Dell about interest in a tie-up.

The two men set up a meeting in Austin, Texas. There, Tan made his official pitch: He promised to offer a generous premium and deliver value well above that. Dell seemed receptive to the idea, in part because Vmware’s stock — of which he owned 40 percent — hadn’t been performing well since the spinoff. Vmware’s board, where Dell is chairman, formed a transactio­n committee to analyze a possible takeover.

But if the deal had a slow start, the two sides soon made up for lost time. Once they both agreed to move forward, the transactio­n came together in about two to three weeks.

In addition to Tan and Dell, the chief negotiator­s were Broadcom software head Tom Krause and Egon Durban, a partner in private equity giant Silver Lake. The investment firm is a major Vmware shareholde­r and had helped Dell’s namesake company go private nearly a decade ago. Vmware was advised by bankers at Goldman Sachs and Jpmorgan Chase.

Broadcom is no stranger to M&A. The company was the product of a 2016 merger with Tan’s Avago Technologi­es, and it has completed several blockbuste­r deals since then. Broadcom sped through the process.

“We pride ourselves on having a very clear vision in terms of what we want to do,” Broadcom’s Krause said in an interview. “And when we see these opportunit­ies, we move quickly.”

Advisers were retained, and staff hustled to complete diligence to bring together Vmware — codenamed Verona during the talks — with Broadcom, which went by Barcelona.

The European theme was fitting because Dell was in Davos, Switzerlan­d, during the final leg of talks. Broadcom and Vmware also held meetings near their Silicon Valley offices. The two companies are based about 20 miles from each other, with Broadcom in San Jose and Vmware in Palo Alto.

Broadcom worked with at least four banks, and then brought in two more during the days leading up to the deal. Those six firms — Barclays, Bank of America, Citigroup, Credit Suisse Group, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo — ended up agreeing to lend Broadcom $32 billion, the largest debt financing in more than a year.

Despite the market turmoil punishing tech stocks this month, the deal proceeded smoothly and with regular due diligence. People close to the talks said it was more of a traditiona­l negotiatio­n than they saw with the last big tech deal this year, Elon Musk’s $44 billion takeover of Twitter.

The two sides wanted to move fast — to minimize leaks and cope with a volatile market — so Vmware held off on speaking with other potential bidders, according to the people with knowledge of the discussion­s. Instead, a so-called go-shop clause was included in the agreement.

Under that provision, Vmware will be able to solicit competing offers for the next 40 days, which is rare in strategic deals of this size. That gave Vmware’s board the comfort that it could proceed.

Both sides agreed to a $1.5 billion breakup fee, but Vmware only has to pay $750 million if it can find a superior offer by the July 5 deadline.

Having the go-shop provision in the agreement made the deal more palatable to Vmware — and Broadcom was willing to live with it.

“It is what it is,” Krause said. “It’s part of a highly negotiated deal. There were a lot of trade-offs made.”

Based on the price and other conditions, he said, “putting in the go-shop — that seemed like the right balance.”

San Diego stocks

 ?? JASON ALDEN BLOOMBERG ?? Michael Dell (left) seemed receptive to a deal with Broadcom in early May, in part because Vmware’s stock — of which he owned 40 percent — hadn’t been performing well since the spinoff from Dell Technologi­es.
JASON ALDEN BLOOMBERG Michael Dell (left) seemed receptive to a deal with Broadcom in early May, in part because Vmware’s stock — of which he owned 40 percent — hadn’t been performing well since the spinoff from Dell Technologi­es.

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