| FOCUS-Compaq/DEC could build big position in Europe 
 Reuters Story - January 26, 1998 16:37
 %DE %US %MRG %DPR %HOT %ELI %ENT CPQ DEC IBM HWP BT.L CSGZn.S INTC V%REUTER P%RTR
 
 By Neal Boudette
 FRANKFURT, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Compaq Computer Corp
 should be able to use its surprise $9.6 billion takeover of
 Digital Equipment Corp . to build an even stronger
 position in Europe, analysts said on Monday.
 "This basically gives Compaq the reach it needs to tap into
 corporations in order to become one of the top computer," said
 Terry Earnest-Jones at market researcher International Data Corp
 in London.
 The merger "will take Compaq a very long way in achieving
 its goal" of rivalling IBM Corp  and Hewlett-Packard Co
 for leadership in the computer systems industry, he
 said.
 Philip Williams at Dataquest said he expected the deal to
 have "pretty positive" results in Europe, where Compaq is the
 leading PC supplier and Digital has a broad array of corporate
 customers.
 "Compaq is looking to move up into the higher-margin server
 business and Digital will do that for them," he said.
 The takeover, in which Digital would become a wholly owned
 subsidiary of the Houston, Texas, PC maker, would give Compaq a
 vast computer service business in Europe as well as several
 manufacturing plants in Scotland and service centers in Ireland
 and Germany.
 While the merger is likely to result in layoffs in the
 United States, consolidating the two groups in Europe would
 probably take more time, the analysts said.
 "They will probably take a while to decide how to move
 forward," he said. "You can't move as quickly on this in Europe
 as U.S. companies usually do."
 But in the PC business, where the two are competitors,
 Compaq may be able to use Digital's European facilities to
 expand sales.
 "They may need the extra manufacturing capacity. They have
 been expanding rapidly," Earnest-Jones said.
 More importantly, Compaq will gain access to a customer list
 that includes major European companies such as British
 Telecommunications Plc  and Credit Suisse .
 Compaq is the world's largest PC maker with $24.6 billion in
 sales last year. In Europe it is number one with a 16 percent
 market share, according to Dataquest.
 Last week the company said European sales rose 33 percent in
 1997 to $7.94 billion, powered by a 52 percent jump in fourth
 quarter unit sales.
 Digital, on the other hand, has struggled to balance its
 commitment to PCs based on Intel Corp  processors and to
 larger machines based on its own Alpha chip.
 In the year ended in June, it reported net income of $141
 million while sales fell 11 percent to $13 billion. It has also
 had mixed results in Europe, where its German unit has been
 unprofitable.
 The companies reportedly discussed a merger about a year
 ago, with Compaq mostly interested in Digital's large computer
 service organisation, but the talks broke down.
 Although the companies agreed to the merger on friendly
 terms, the analyasts said it could still encourter difficulties.
 "It is a big switch to go from the high-growth fast changing
 PC market that Compaq is in to the broader corporate computer
 market," Earnest-Jones said. "And the size of the combined
 organisation will be a challenge."
 Compaq has 18,900 employees, and Digital 54,000.
 The analysts expected Compaq Europe chief Andreas Barth to
 run the combined European organisation.
 However, Williams said the union of two of the world's
 largest computer makers could cause some Digital managers to
 leave the company.
 "It will be difficult to justify having two management
 organisations in place and the Compaq style is more aggressive
 than the Digital style, so there may be cultural differences,"
 he said.
 "There will certainly be areas where the two organisations
 can't co-exist," he said.
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