Collapse of IBM/Sun deal could leave Sun without a suitor, analysts say
Sun reportedly rejects IBM offer
By
Jon Brodkin
,
Network World
, 04/05/2009
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Sun Microsystems may find itself without any viable suitors if it does not come to terms with potential acquirer IBM, some industry analysts believe.
Sun has rejected an offer from IBM as too low, according to the Wall Street Journal. With IBM reportedly offering an 80% premium over Sun's actual stock price, it would be "pure insanity" for Sun to turn down
the offer, says Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Brian Babineau.
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Sun has struggled financially since the dot-com bubble burst, and its predicament has only been made worse by the current
recession. IBM may be alone in having interest in all of Sun's various product lines, including storage, servers, database
software, Java and IT services, Babineau says.
"IBM has a nearly perfect alignment with most of Sun's businesses," Babineau says. "I don't think that anybody [other than
IBM] would buy the whole company."
HP might consider buying Sun, but is still busy integrating newly acquired EDS, which is no small task, says Patrick Becker Jr., chief investment officer at Becker Capital Management.
"It's a pretty shallow pool" of companies that would want to buy Sun, Becker says.
There is still time for IBM and Sun to work out a deal, Becker notes. But if Sun rejects IBM's buyout offers, he says the
company risks going down the same path as Yahoo, which has struggled on Wall Street and undergone a leadership change since
rejecting an offer from Microsoft a year ago.
While Babineau and Becker are skeptical that anyone other than IBM might want to buy Sun, Pund-IT analyst Charles King is
a bit more bullish on Sun's value. Buying Sun may not make sense for HP, because Sun still relies heavily on UltraSparc processors and HP has tried to move away from proprietary processor architectures,
King says. But Dell could be interested in buying Sun's high-end server lines in order to shed a reputation of being an x86-only house, King
says.
If no single vendor steps forward to purchase Sun, the possibility of a carve-out plan in which each business unit is sold
to a different company remains. EMC or NetApp might want Sun's storage business, while HP or Dell could snatch up the server line, Babineau speculates. Sun's
database software could go to Microsoft or Oracle.
Selling Sun piece by piece would be complicated, but could be the only option remaining if the IBM deal doesn't work out,
Babineau says. The process could end with Sun ceasing to exist, or existing as a smaller company focused on just one business
line.
Splitting up a company in this manner raises the challenge of trying to prove the value of each business line, King notes.
Even something like Java, which has broad reach throughout the IT industry, could be tough for Sun to sell because the company
has not made a fortune in this area yet, he says.
"I'm not sure that the business case for Java exists quite yet," King says, adding that "I'm not sure a fire sale would really be particularly good for the company."
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Comments (7)
Great company with bad marketingBy Anonymous on April 6, 2009, 11:57 amIn my opinion Sun Microsystems is a great company that is very inventive with rock solid products. The problem they have is that their marketing and sales department...
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That kind of thinking is exactly why Sun is in such troubleBy Anonymous on April 6, 2009, 1:12 pm"Great products" is the engineering way of thinking. "If we build it, they will come." Doesn't work in baseball either. Silicon Valley is littered with the carcasses...
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Sun's share price is 6.42.By Anon on April 6, 2009, 1:38 pmSun's share price is 6.42. They turned down an offer of $9/share. They have as I understand it axed most of their sales & marketing groups so there is no chance...
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Oracle?By Anonymous on April 6, 2009, 10:26 pmI think that Oracle should consider buying Sun for 3 reasons : 1. They could try to become a global company 2. They could capitalize on Java after the acquisition...
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Time for Cisco to make a move?By Anonymous on April 6, 2009, 11:49 pmWith the amount of flirting Cisco has been doing beyond their core traditional networking technologies of late, it would seem in my eyes that the aquisition of Sun...
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Cisco is interesting - what about Apple though?By Anon on April 7, 2009, 9:55 amI agree Cisco could use the boost into the datacenter space - Apple could as well...
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