"3Com's Palm Unit Files for IPO; AOL, Motorola and Nokia to Buy Shares" - (this is from Bloomberg)
Tue, 14 Dec 1999, 1:47am EST
By Scott Lanman
Santa Clara, California, Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) -- 3Com Corp.'s Palm Inc. unit, the No. 1 electronic-organizer maker, filed for an initial public offering of stock, giving investors a way to benefit from 3Com's fastest-growing business.
Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc., the two biggest cellular-phone makers, and No. 1 Internet service America Online Inc. agreed to invest as much as $225 million to buy Palm stock in private placements, giving the three companies as much as 4.5 percent of the company's capital stock, the filing said.
3Com, the No. 2 computer-networking equipment maker, expects to spin off Palm to 3Com shareholders six months after the IPO. Palm filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission to sell common stock valued at $100 million, though the filing gave no details about precisely how many shares the company hopes to sell or how much the IPO would raise. ''This will be very well-received'' by investors, said analyst Patrick Houghton of Sutro & Co., who rates 3Com shares a ''buy.''
Houghton valued Palm at about $10 billion, or about two- thirds of 3Com's $15.5 billion market value. Palm accounted for $176.5 million, or 13 percent, of 3Com's $1.39 billion in revenue in the quarter ended Aug. 27.
3Com shares rose 1 3/4 to 44 13/16 in trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market. They climbed as high as 49 after the filing. The shares have risen 64 percent since 3Com said on Sept. 13 that it planned to spin off Palm. 3Com will own at least 80.1 percent of Palm after the IPO.
Palm's Plans
More than 5 million Palm devices have been sold since their introduction in 1996. The handheld units let users input phone numbers and memos on a liquid-crystal screen with a stylus. In recent months, 3Com has licensed the Palm operating-system software to high-profile companies like Nokia and Sony Corp.
According to Palm's filing, Palm and America Online plan to offer Internet services over Palm devices, while Motorola is licensing the Palm software for new wireless products. For America Online, it's the first time its service would be offered on a handheld device. The company's flagship online service has more than 19 million subscribers.
Nokia and AOL each agreed to buy the lesser of $80 million or 1.5 percent of Palm's capital stock. Motorola agreed to buy the lesser of $65 million or 1.5 percent of common stock.
The investments by Nokia, Motorola and America Online will occur at the same time as the closing of the IPO, Palm's filing said. The filing defined capital stock as outstanding common stock as well as options that have been granted as of 2000.
Popular Devices
3Com's Palm devices, whose prices range from $179 to $499, have functions like a phone and address book, to-do list and message pad. They come with a stylus and software that recognizes handwriting on its liquid-crystal screen. The units can swap information with each other and with desktop personal computers. The high-end Palm VII provides quick wireless Internet access.
3Com acquired Palm in June 1997 as part of its $8.9 billion purchase of U.S. Robotics Corp., the world's biggest maker of computer modems, which bought Palm in 1995 for about $47 million. 3Com has struggled with slower-than-expected sales, inventory backups and falling prices from non-Palm lines acquired from U.S. Robotics.
Palm, which has 630 employees and was founded in January 1992, is profitable. Its fiscal first-quarter net income rose 20 percent to $9.66 million from a year earlier, while net income in the fiscal year ended May 28 rose more than sevenfold to $29.6 million, according to the filing. First-quarter revenue rose 52 percent.
Palm, which is changing its name to Palm Inc. from Palm Computing Inc., received 31 percent of its sales outside the U.S. in the fiscal first quarter.
Sony Veteran
On Dec. 2, 3Com said it picked a leader for Palm: Carl Yankowski, 51, a Sony Corp. veteran who quit a day earlier as president and CEO of Reebok International Ltd.'s Reebok brand of athletic shoes and clothing, a position he held for 14 months. He started as chief executive of Palm today.
Yankowski's base salary is $600,000,and he will get $48 million in stock options, (Mang's note : what had this guy done to Palm to deserve this ?) or no more than 2 percent of Palm's outstanding shares, according to the filing.
He joins Palm President Alan Kessler, 42, who had headed Palm since June and has been with 3Com since 1985, and Chief Financial Officer Judy Bruner, 41, an 11-year 3Com employee who moved to Palm in September.
Yankowski's appointment marked Palm's third round of management changes in less than two years. Jeff Hawkins and Donna Dubinsky, who developed and marketed the original PalmPilot, left 3Com last year to found their own electronic-organizer company, Handspring Inc. Its device is based on Palm software, but offers an expansion slot for digital-music players and other add-ons.
In June, Kessler replaced Robin Abrams, who had joined Palm in February from Hewlett-Packard Co.'s VeriFone unit.
Filing Details
Details about how many shares will be sold, and how much the company hopes to get for them, generally would be included in a subsequent filing. Palm estimated total proceeds from the stock sale at $100 million in order to calculate an SEC registration fee. Companies, though, often use a nominal estimate in their initial IPO filing and amend the number later.
In a July 1998 IPO filing, for example, Conoco Inc. listed $100 million in expected proceeds for an offering that wound up raising $4.4 billion. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimated $10 million in proceeds in a filing that led to its $3.66 billion IPO.
Underwriters for the stock sale will include Goldman, Sachs & Co., Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co., Merrill Lynch & Co. and Robertson Stephens. Palm said it will list on the Nasdaq National Market and hopes to trade under the ticker symbol ''PALM.''
1999 Bloomberg L.P.
bloomberg.com
Mang |