Showing posts with label 3PAR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3PAR. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Dell's Enterprise Challenge Remains after 3PAR

Associated Press

 
Dell Inc. doesn't have to start over in its quest to become a significant purveyor of technology for businesses after losing a multibillion dollar bidding contest for an obscure data-storage maker.

But it won't be easy, either, for Dell to shake its "Dude, you're getting a Dell" image and move into the more profitable business of selling powerful behind-the-scenes technology to other companies.

Dell, which launched the bidding contest for 3Par Inc. on Aug. 16, conceded defeat Thursday and said it won't match the latest offer from its archrival, Hewlett-Packard Co.

HP raised the stakes to $33 per share, or about $2.07 billion - 83 percent above Dell's first offer and more than three times what 3Par stock was trading at then. Dell's latest offer had been a dollar per share less, or about $2 billion.

Dell was hoping to buy 3Par so it could diversify its business more quickly.

Dell's made-to-order computer business helped make PCs inexpensive and ubiquitous, but other companies including HP found ways to build even cheaper machines using contract manufacturers.

Although HP was able to expand beyond the business of selling computers, Dell has remained very much a computer company, with more than half its revenue coming from PCs last fiscal year. Rising component costs and the PC industry's race to rock-bottom prices, accelerated by the rise of cheap netbooks from competitors such as Acer Inc., combined to sap much of the profit out of Dell's core business.

Through a string of acquisitions, Dell has raced to follow IBM Corp., HP and other high-tech companies into the more lucrative business of selling data-center hardware and consulting services.

And while its servers do not generate as much revenue as its PC business, Dell is a leading maker of x86 servers, a low-end product for companies and data centers. Those servers are seeing a surge of demand as improvements in technology make them increasingly competitive with more expensive servers. In the second quarter, Dell was the second-largest maker of server computers by number shipped, according to Gartner Inc.

But Dell's ambitions have often been met with skepticism because of its lower-end focus, and because it started branching out later than its competitors. In the meantime, the market has grown more crowded; database software maker Oracle Corp. began selling servers after acquiring Sun Microsystems in January, and networking equipment king Cisco Systems Inc. started to build its own servers last year.

Even Dell's biggest acquisition to date, Perot Systems, didn't carry the weight Dell might have hoped, Forrester Research analyst Andrew Reichman said. The large technology-consulting business, which Dell bought last fall for $3.9 billion, isn't influential enough "to really move the needle as much as Dell would need to be on an equal footing with HP and IBM," Reichman said.

"People see them (Dell) as box-pushers," he said in a recent interview.

Dell defends its strategy of staying away from huge storage or server systems and says it sees more value in selling building block servers and storage appliances that customers can link together when they need to grow.

"For those customers who have bought from us, who are our customers, even the largest ones are very satisfied with our ability to solve their data-center needs and really stick with us," said Praveen Asthana, Dell's vice president of strategy for its enterprise technology segment.

But Dell, like its competitors, is eyeing cloud computing, a massive shift just under way in data-center technology, as the next area of rapid growth and sweeter profits.

To take advantage of it, Dell needs to beef up its product line and set itself apart from the competition. Dell could have used 3Par, which makes the sort of massive, high-end systems that Dell had stayed away from.

But that isn't the only option, especially at such a high price, said Morningstar analyst Michael Holt. Dell can still consider other storage providers, companies that make data-center management software or makers of networking equipment, he said.

Increasingly, companies aren't buying their own computer servers for certain tasks anymore. Instead, they're paying to have software they would have stored on those machines delivered to them over the Internet.

Cloud computing is attractive to Dell and the others because the systems are designed to be shared by multiple customers, which spreads out the cost of operating pricey equipment. Servers and storage computers need to ramp up or scale down quickly based on demand to give all the customers the same high level of service. Storage machines from 3Par are made for that kind of system.

Dell, HP and others are trying to decide how many pieces of the cloud puzzle they need to own, and how many they can offer through partnerships. All are trying to make their data-center solutions more flexible and less expensive, and make it easier for customers to get new programs running.

Owning the entire range of products might make it faster to get a customer up and running, but it might mean some parts are not the best of breed, said Adrian O'Connell, an analyst for Gartner Inc. Every company will see the trade-offs differently.

For Dell, O'Connell doesn't believe 3Par would have been a critical piece. Dell's bigger challenge, he said, is to come up with a unique vision for the entire data-center structure.

Dell also needs to train its sales staff to sell that vision to high-level technology executives. Gaining their trust takes time, he said.

"If you're an IBM or an HP or a Sun/Oracle, you've got a heritage of many, many years of selling mission-critical systems into those very large customer environments," O'Connell said. "Dell has to prove it's got a right to be there."

Friday, September 3, 2010

H-P Outguns Dell in Takeover Duel

The Wall Street Journal

 
It wasn't the biggest bidding war the tech world has ever seen. But when it ended Thursday morning—after 10 days of all-night strategy sessions, hardball phone negotiations and power naps on couches—the battle between titans Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Inc. for a humble maker of data-storage systems certainly qualified as one of the wildest ever.

Winner H-P and runner-up Dell both offered fat premiums for 3PAR Inc. The company traded for less than $10 a share before Dell announced its intent to acquire it on Aug 16. H-P's winning $2.1 billion offer, or $33 a share, far surpasses Dell's original $1.1 billion bid. H-P and Dell both say they wanted 3PAR, a player in the fast-growing field of "cloud computing," to help drive their growth.

The frenzy sent 3PAR stock soaring into the stratosphere, more than tripling in just over two weeks. The bids went "into a land of dreamed-up future payoff," said Rob Cihra, an analyst at Caris & Co. In the end, he said, the bidding crossed the line into "a battle for pride more than 3PAR."

The duel was far from settled as recently as late Wednesday, said people familiar with the matter, as Dell vacillated between dropping out and pushing forward with yet another proposal for 3PAR.

Dell's bankers and lawyers had already worked around the clock for more than 48 hours on several proposals that they sent to 3PAR's advisers, snatching only a few hours of sleep in between. Late Wednesday, Dell considered withdrawing from the bidding entirely. Then it changed course, and launched a $32-a-share offer that came with a new set of conditions attached.

Even as Dell agonized, H-P's executives and advisers monitored Dell's moves through "the grapevine," said a person familiar with the matter. After hearing Dell might have a revised proposal, H-P moved ahead with a $33-a-share offer that it had prepared several days earlier to preempt a further escalation of the bidding war. H-P had been "sitting on its hands for five days," long enough to have sketched out its responses to Dell's potential moves, this person said.

Tech titans H-P and Dell have a history of feuding. They have often poached one another's executives. H-P overtook Dell as the world's largest PC maker by units in late 2006. They have both been mining the same territory to expand into new businesses.

This latest drama unfolded simultaneously in Dell's headquarters in Round Rock, Tex.; in H-P's Palo Alto, Calif., headquarters; 3PAR's offices in Fremont, Calif.; and in white-shoe investment banking offices in San Francisco and New York. Top executives such as Dell chief executive Michael Dell were kept constantly apprised on the fast-moving talks via email and phone briefings, said people familiar with the matter.

Bidding wars and hostile takeovers were once anathema in Silicon Valley, where deal-makers preferred to negotiate friendly arrangements between companies that shared similar work cultures. But as tech darlings such as Oracle Corp., Microsoft Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. have become sprawling, maturing behemoths, their search for new sources of growth has introduced an era of more combative deal-making.

Oracle was one of the first companies to employ the hostile tactic—buying rival PeopleSoft in 2004 after an 18-month pursuit. Last year, International Business Machines Corp. was close to a deal to buy Sun Microsystems when Oracle swooped in at the last minute with a winning $7.4 billion bid. Not long after, EMC Corp. fought rival NetApp Inc. over Data Domain, a niche storage-technology company that it had coveted. Data Domain, which initially agreed to sell itself to NetApp for $25 a share, or $1.5 billion, eventually went to EMC for $33.50 per share, or about $2.4 billion.

3PAR is particularly prized because it makes storage products that are part of the field of "cloud computing," in which businesses store information in data centers operated by specialists and access that information over the Internet. A spokesman for 3PAR declined to comment.

The lofty winning offer translates to hefty riches for 3PAR investors including venture-capital firms Mayfield Fund, Menlo Ventures and Worldview Technology Partners. In addition, mutual-fund giant Fidelity Investments is among 3PAR's biggest institutional shareholders. Among individuals, 3PAR CEO David Scott, who is a former H-P executive, will reap around $100 million for his stake in the company.

Founded in 1999, 3PAR went public in 2007 and had been in the sights of H-P and Dell for some time. While 3PAR had posted losses for its past three fiscal years, it was considered a growth company—posting $194 million in revenue its fiscal year ended in March, up from $118 million two years earlier—with a hot technology.

On July 8, H-P contacted 3PAR about a potential acquisition, and executives from the two companies—including 3PAR CEO Mr. Scott and then H-P CEO Mark Hurd—met to discuss the parameters of a possible deal the next week. 3PAR's directors quickly hired Qatalyst Partners LLP, which is run by industry insider Frank Quattrone.

That same month, Qatalyst, which declined to comment, ran a mini-auction for 3PAR. In addition to Dell, which 3PAR had held discussions with about a reselling partnership, the bankers invited two more companies to join the bidding, which people familiar with the matter identified as Oracle and NetApp.

Oracle and NetApp soon dropped out, leaving Dell and H-P. In late July, H-P and Dell put in their first offers, with Dell indicating it would pay $15 to $17 a share and H-P's offer in the "mid-teens," said people familiar with the matter.

Dell soon agreed to pay $18 per share, if 3PAR entered into two weeks of exclusive negotiations, according to regulatory filings. 3PAR's advisers asked H-P if it would raise its offer, but H-P declined on Aug. 1, partly because it wasn't convinced of the seriousness of another suitor's interest in 3PAR, people familiar with the matter said.

On Aug. 16, Dell announced its intent to acquire 3PAR for $18 a share. With 62.5 million shares outstanding, the bid was valued at about $1.1 billion. That might have been the end of the story, especially since less than two weeks earlier, H-P CEO Mr. Hurd unexpectedly announced his resignation. Typically, when a company loses its chief, all strategic business is put on hold until a replacement is named. Not so in this case.

When H-P learned it was up against Dell, said people familiar with the matter, a team of executives laid out the steps they would take to thwart their rival's every possible move. A person familiar with the matter said H-P's board had pre-approved a deal for 3PAR so that the company's executives were free to make new bids without first getting clearance from the board.

On Aug. 23, H-P offered $24 per share for 3PAR.

Dell's original agreement with 3PAR gave it the right to match any counteroffer, and it came back with a $24.30-a-share bid the following day.

But H-P was "in this to win it," a person familiar with the matter said last week. Last week, H-P twice raised its bid in $3 increments, eventually offering $30 per share, or about $2 billion. "It was just adrenaline that kept people going," said one person familiar with the matter.

At Dell, mergers and strategy chief Dave Johnson, along with Mr. Dell and other senior members of the deals team and adviser Credit Suisse, considered several options to save its deal to buy 3PAR via conference calls, text messages and emails, according to people familiar with the matter. As a Wednesday deadline for Dell's response approached, some advisers pulled all-nighters at the office, sneaking in power naps on office couches.

Late Wednesday, Dell put forth its final revised proposal for 3PAR, indicating it would pay up to $32 a share if 3PAR's board agreed to include a commercial agreement and a $92 million break-up fee. But 3PAR's board balked at the idea of a commercial agreement that would have required 3PAR to sell equipment to Dell even if H-P were to buy the company, said a person familiar with the matter.

Early Thursday, Dell decided to drop out entirely, after 3PAR's board rebuffed its revised proposal yet again, people familiar with the matter said.

But H-P had heard word that Dell had a revised proposal in the works, people familiar with the matter say. H-P executives and advisers, including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., grew worried when no announcement came. Through the night, the H-P camp pumped their sources to figure out what Dell might be planning, even as Dell and 3PAR continued to negotiate, these people said.

Around 8:30 a.m. Thursday morning, H-P representatives called 3PAR preemptively and bumped their offer to $33 a share, people familiar with the matter said. 3PAR's Mr. Scott was walking up the stairs in a London restaurant to find a quiet corner where he could dial into a board meeting to make a final decision, when the offer came in. About nine hours later, the two sides had struck a deal.

Friday, August 27, 2010

HP’s $1.8 Billion 3Par Offer Steps Up Its Bidding War With Dell

Bloomberg

Hewlett-Packard Co. escalated a bidding war with Dell Inc. yesterday, saying it would pay $1.8 billion for the computer-storage company 3Par Inc. and trumping an offer from Dell for the second time.

HP’s bid of $27 a share is 11 percent more than Dell’s $24.30-a-share offer, which 3Par had accepted earlier in the day. The public bidding kicked off on Aug. 16, when Dell said it would pay $1.15 billion, or $18 a share.

The escalating bids have boosted the price to about nine times the annual revenue of 3Par, which has lost money every year since going public in 2007. The premium reflects the urgency for both companies to use acquisitions to fuel growth and expand beyond personal computers. 3Par sells hardware and software that make it easier and cheaper to store information.

“One company wants to not only get it for themselves, but prevent a fierce competitor getting it,” said HP investor Mike Shinnick, who helps oversee $7.5 billion for Wasatch Advisors Inc. in South Bend, Indiana. “The real question is: Can you make that money off it going forward? It’s very questionable.”

After HP announced its latest bid, 3Par jumped 6.6 percent to $27.75 in extended trading yesterday, a sign investors expect the price to go up again. The shares had fallen 73 cents to $26.03 earlier on the New York Stock Exchange. 3Par, based in Fremont, California, had said it would pay Dell a $72 million termination fee if it accepts another acquisition proposal.

Proven Approach?

HP and Dell are chasing new areas of the growing market for data-center hardware and software, betting they can use their global sales forces to quickly ramp up revenue at 3Par, said Shannon Cross, an analyst at Cross Research in Livingston, New Jersey.

“You just literally can target a wider addressable market,” she said. “The model has been proven to work.”

John D’Avolio, a 3Par spokesman, declined to comment. Dell spokesman David Frink said his company plans to act “in the best interest of customers and shareholders.” Dell has the right to match or exceed the offer within three days of 3Par saying it considers HP’s bid to be superior, he said.

HP, the world’s largest PC maker, would gain higher-end storage products, helping it package its servers, storage and networking equipment for corporate customers, said Jeff Fidacaro, an analyst at Susquehanna Financial Group in New York. For Dell, owning 3Par would mean a chance to sell its own storage systems, rather than reselling products from EMC Corp., he said.

Better for HP?


3Par is “not setting the world on fire” in terms of profitability, though it is one of the few attractive storage companies available to buy, EMC President and Chief Operating Officer Pat Gelsinger said yesterday at a press event. HP would likely derive more value from 3Par than Dell by offering the products through its sales force, Gelsinger said. Hopkinton, Massachusetts-based EMC, which leads the market for storage computers, competes with 3Par.

HP’s latest offer values 3Par at 262 times the company’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization during the past year. In 20 deals in the past five years, acquirers paid a median 15 times trailing Ebitda, according to Bloomberg data.

3Par’s stock jumped 45 percent on Aug. 23, after HP announced its earlier bid. The shares closed at $9.65 on Aug. 13, the last trading day before Dell’s initial agreement was made public. Dell fell 4 cents to $11.75 in Nasdaq Stock Market trading yesterday, while HP declined 2 cents to $38.22 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Hurd’s Departure


Although HP is more than three times as profitable as Dell, it’s coping with the loss of its chief executive officer. Mark Hurd exited on Aug. 6, following a probe that found he filed inaccurate expense reports to conceal a personal relationship with a marketing contractor. He had led the company on an acquisition spree of more than $20 billion, expanding into products ranging from networking equipment to smartphones.

Dell, meanwhile, is trying to rebound from shrinking market share in PCs and tightening profit margins. This month, more than 25 percent of shareholders withheld support for CEO Michael Dell as a director.

Kaushik Roy, an analyst at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco, has predicted that HP will end up with 3Par.

“HP is going to win,” he said this week. “HP has the balance sheet to buy anything.”

Monday, August 23, 2010

3PAR Surges as HP Enters the Fray with Dell

Forbes

A potential bidding war between the tech heavyweights juices the firm's shares.

Hewlett-Packard said Monday it has submitted a bid to acquire 3PAR for $24 in cash, for a total of $1.6 billion. The bid is a 33% premium above the $18 per share Dell offered last week.

Shares of 3PAR are higher by 42%. Compellent Technologies, which is a provider of enterprise-class network storage solutions, is up 10.25%. CommVault, a data management software company, is up 13.6%. Isilon Systems ( ISLN - news - people ) is also higher on the 3PAR news, up 11.9%.

On 10 times average daily trading volume, Texas Pacific Land Trust  ( TPL -  news  -  people ) is up 13.8% today. And on more than 13 times average daily trading volume, SinoCoking Coal and Coke Chemical Industries is up 21%.