News & Analysis
Oracle snatches Sun Microsystems for $7.4 billion
Bolaji Ojo
4/20/2009 8:13 AM EDT
The transaction ends speculations about the future of Sun Microsystems, a major player in the computing arena that has lost its glitter in recent years as competitive pressures in the market place crimped its operations and forced it to seek alliances with stronger and bigger players.
Oracle's move was unexpected in several quarters although there were reports Sun Microsystems was in discussions with other potential buyers, in addition to its on and off talks with IBM. Oracle said it offered to buy Sun Microsystems to beef up its software offerings and add "mission-critical computing systems," according to Oracle CEO Larry Ellison.
"Oracle will be the only company that can engineer an integrated system—applications to disk—where all the pieces fit and work together so customers do not have to do it themselves," Ellison said in a statement. "Our customers benefit as their systems integration costs go down while system performance, reliability and security go up."
Oracle will pay $9.50 per share in cash for Sun Microsystems, representing a 42 percent premium to Sun Microsystems' closing price on Friday, April 17. The deal will help boost Oracle's pro forma earnings about $1.5 billion in the first year, rising to $2 billion in the second year, according to the company.
The transaction, according to Oracle, gives the company two key Sun Microsystems software, including Java and Solaris, which Oracle already deploys in its products.



dirk.bruere
4/20/2009 2:03 PM EDT
And here we were all rooting for a Microsoft takeover so that Java could finally be standardized. Just kidding:-)
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KS67
4/20/2009 10:48 PM EDT
Mar. 18: IBM+Sun= "Makes sense... This is about customer acquistion, not technology"
Apr. 20: IBM announces 11% revenue decline. Looks like some key, big-spending customers (e.g. banks) are cutting back?
Apr. 20: Oracle offers a compelling plan of how to add Sun valuing it as a complement that will build-up a strong, full-featured competitor to IBM & HP and, maybe even Cisco. This plan wins (despite the expected brutal job cuts) because it shows an optimistic view of what to do with a strong technology player that has lost of some of its viability as a must-have solution provider. Together with Sun, Oracle now can grow into new markets that IBM & HP have to themselves. Oracle is the entrepreneurs choice - way to go Ellison.
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