Sun made colossal mistake in turning down IBM offer, analysts say
Reader comments: Could Cisco, Oracle or Apple purchase Sun?
By
Jon Brodkin
,
Network World
, 04/07/2009
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With IBM/Sun negotiations reportedly at a standstill, a consensus seems to be emerging among industry analysts: Sun has made a colossal mistake in turning down IBM's $7 billion
acquisition offer.
"My first thought was, IBM threw Sun a rope. They used it to make a noose," Annex Research analyst Bob Djurdjevic writes in
an e-mail.
Collapse of IBM/Sun deal could leave Sun without a suitor
IBM/Sun merger talks collapsed after "disputes over millions of dollars of payout to Sun executives, in addition to the takeover
price and conditions attached to the deal," the Bloomberg news service reported Monday.
"If it is indeed true that the Sun Board turned down the IBM offer because they thought a 100% premium on the value of their
listing ship was too low a price in the midst of an economic storm, then Sun deserves to go down," Djurdjevic says. "And to
go down in the history of IT as yet another company that let pride get in the way of good judgment."
"Pure insanity" is the phrase used by Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Brian Babineau to describe Sun turning down the premium
offered by IBM.
While Sun has many interesting technology divisions, including servers, storage, Java and other software, the company has
consistently failed to turn a profit and analysts are largely pessimistic that it can execute a successful turnaround on its
own.
Analyst Judith Hurwitz notes in her blog that rumors have Sun Chairman and co-founder Scott McNealy taking the company over from current CEO Jonathan Schwartz. It
worked for Steve Jobs and Apple, but Sun has failed to gain leadership roles in both the hardware and software markets and
probably will not have a good future as an independent company, she writes.
According to Bloomberg, Schwartz and McNealy both have contracts guaranteeing them three times their annual pay in salaries
and bonuses if Sun is acquired. IBM did not want to make such payments to the executives, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous
sources. Sun objected to IBM wanting too much control over Sun's projects and employees before the closing of a deal, and
wanted greater assurance from IBM that it would complete the transaction even if it faced antitrust review, Bloomberg reported.
Sun has not commented about the rumored acquisition but issued a statement to Reuters saying the company "is committed to
its leadership team, growth strategy and building value for its shareholders."
Despite Sun's reassurances, Babineau speculated that the failed talks could lead to a Yahoo-esque "shareholder revolt" in which investors force Sun to make leadership changes.
Shareholder-filed lawsuits are a possibility if Sun can't turn itself around, other analysts were quoted as saying in a San Francisco Chronicle story.
"We question management's ability to do a successful turnaround on their own," Bill Kreher, a technology analyst with Edward
Jones, told the Chronicle. "The transition is challenging and is taking longer than expected."
Network World readers weighed in on the failed IBM/Sun talks as well, speculating that companies such as Cisco, Oracle or Apple might be interested in purchasing Sun.
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Comments (4)
Sun made colossal mistakeBy TonytheTiger on April 7, 2009, 5:58 pmI think analysts should think before spouting insults and unfounded judgments. I personally think that Sun's board wanted to make sure that IBM would see the deal...
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CSCO will buy SUNBy Anonymous on April 7, 2009, 11:06 pmCISCO will buy SUN, which will give them 10% of server market, Solaris, Java, Storagetek,SPARC and MySQL. CSCO should consider selling SPARC or find suitable partners...
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Cisco? Me thinks not!By Anonymous on April 8, 2009, 12:26 pmI HIGHLY doubt that Cisco will swoop in and pay a 100% premuim over the current share price. Acquisition is possible, but not at them terms! Glad I don't own any...
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Sun and Google Better FitBy Anonymous on April 9, 2009, 9:07 amSun is about applications. Google should buy Sun and 1) keep open source alive by keeping Java JREs, etc... alive 2)use Java to port it's applications across ALL...
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