Oracle FUD has faded, PeopleSoft customers say
By
Stacy Cowley
,
IDG News Service
, 09/19/2003
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ANAHEIM, Calif. - As Oracle and PeopleSoft continue wrangling in regulatory and legal venues over Oracle's attempted hostile
takeover of PeopleSoft, some customers attending this week's PeopleSoft Connect said they're inclined to believe CEO Craig
Conway's assurances that the proposed deal is dead.
"Frankly, I don't think people want it to happen. We don't want it to happen. I don't think it will," said David Womeldorf,
chief technology officer of food service equipment parts supplier IMI Bevcore Solutions, in Osseo, Minn.
Bevcore is a customer of both PeopleSoft and Oracle. The company uses Oracle's database software. When Bevcore evaluated applications
vendors, its choice came down to Oracle or PeopleSoft and the company selected PeopleSoft because of the breadth of its offerings
and its better-designed thin-client interface, Womeldorf said.
"We chose PeopleSoft over Oracle two years ago, and we'd do the same thing today," he said.
Oracle's $7.3 billion tender offer to PeopleSoft's shareholders to take over the company remains in place, but the tenor of
its campaign waned after the U.S. Department of Justice extended its review of the proposed deal's antitrust implications.
Oracle executives have said they expect that review to conclude in November. If the Justice Department greenlights the acquisition,
Oracle intends to reignite its efforts to win the support of PeopleSoft's shareholders.
Another obstacle Oracle faces is PeopleSoft's "poison pill," a provision in its bylaws that would allow it to thwart a takeover
by diluting its shares and making an acquisition prohibitively expensive. Oracle is asking a Delaware court to force PeopleSoft
to revoke or redeem the poison pill.
One customer at Connect said Conway's comments at a breakout session about PeopleSoft's anti-takeover provisions helped reassure
him that the company will succeed in fending off Oracle.
"My CFO (chief financial officer) was really nervous -- he was afraid Oracle would take them over and kill all the products,"
said Andrew Ziegele, vice president of IT at Consolidated Container Co., in Atlanta, which relies on software acquired by
PeopleSoft through its recent purchase of J.D. Edwards. "That's part of why I'm here (at Connect)."
In his opening keynote, Conway proclaimed that "the saga is over," and said Oracle had failed in its bid because of the support
PeopleSoft's customers offered the company, both verbally and by opening their wallets. PeopleSoft surprised analysts last
quarter by meeting the financial expectations set for the company before Oracle announced its bid.
Napa County (California) Director of Information Services Ben Wilson said his department moved forward some planned PeopleSoft
purchases to help the company hit its targets last quarter.
"We figured, let's move now and get the things we'll need for the next year and a half," he said.
Napa County executives fired off a letter to Oracle soon after it announced its takeover plans, criticizing the company's
behavior and intentions. Since then, several top Oracle executives have tried to reach Wilson to discuss Oracle's plans for
PeopleSoft, but Wilson said he's not interested.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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