| Western Digital's stop-start merger talks with Japan's Kioxia stall -sources By  Yoshifumi Takemoto,  Makiko Yamazaki and  Miho Uranaka
 October 27, 202312:12 PM EDTUpdated 2 hours ago
 
 TOKYO, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Merger talks between Western Digital  (WDC.O)  and Japan's Kioxia Holdings have stalled, two sources said on Friday,  as opposition from Kioxia investor SK Hynix has complicated the  on-again, off-again deal to create a memory chip giant.
 
 South Korea's SK Hynix  (000660.KS),  itself a major memory chip maker and rival to both companies, on  Thursday said it did not back the deal, citing the potential impact on  the value of its investment in Kioxia.
 
 That  opposition had effectively frozen the deal, one of the people familiar  with the matter said. The two people also cited a failure to agree on  terms.
 
 Shares of Western Digital plunged 9.3% on the news.
 
 It was not immediately clear if the merger would ultimately be scuppered or whether it could be revived.
 
 Kioxia declined to comment. Western Digital and Bain Capital did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment.
 
 Both  Western Digital and Kioxia remained keen to seal the tie-up, according  to the people and two others familiar with the talks. Merger talks  between the chip heavyweights have been off and on since 2021.
 
 Representatives  of both Western Digital and Kioxia, formerly Toshiba Memory, were  working on the sidelines to iron out difficulties, three of the people  said. That included an attempt to win over Hynix, one of the people  said.
 
 All of the people declined to be identified because the information has not been made public.
 
 The  Nikkei business daily, which first reported news that the talks had  been called off, said the companies were also unable to agree on  conditions with top Kioxia shareholder Bain Capital.
 
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 The combined company would control a third of the global NAND flash market, on par with top player Samsung Electronics  (005930.KS), threatening the position of Hynix, the world's No. 3 maker of NAND flash memory.
 
 ANTITRUST ISSUESAsked  about the cancellation, Japanese Industry and Trade Minister Yasutoshi  Nishimura told reporters the government would follow up on the situation  and continue to support Kioxia as the company is an important  manufacturer of advanced chips.
 
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 The  companies were pursuing a merger in the face of a global chip glut and  weak demand for flash memory chips, which have increased pressure on  chipmakers to consolidate.
 
 Since  they first started merger talks two years ago, Kioxia and Western  Digital's negotiations have often stalled over a number of issues,  including valuation discrepancies. There are also concerns about  potential antitrust issues, with Chinese regulators posing a big hurdle.
 
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 The  merger would have given the companies "an opportunity to cut cost and  be a more effective competitor in the market", said Mark Miller, analyst  at Benchmark Company.
 
 "But it was a very complicated deal to get done. I'm not sure China would approve the deal either."
 
 The companies reported a combined loss of roughly $1.4 billion in their latest quarterly reports.
 
 Last  year, Western Digital launched a review of strategic alternatives,  after activist Elliott Investment Management disclosed a stake of nearly  $1 billion in the company and pushed it to separate those businesses.
 
 Japan's top banks were  set to commit 1.9 trillion yen ($12.63 billion) in financing to support the merger, Reuters reported last week.
 
 SK  Hynix invested 395 billion yen in Kioxia in 2018 as a member of a  Bain-led consortium that bought the Japanese firm from Toshiba Corp  (6502.T)  for 2 trillion yen. It holds convertible bonds that can be converted  into an equity stake of up to 15% in Kioxia and its approval was one of  the preconditions for the merger.
 
 ($1 = 150.4200 yen)
 
 Reporting  by Yoshifumi Takemoto, Makiko Yamazaki and David Dolan in Tokyo, Aditya  Soni, Juby Babu and Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by Shweta  Agarwal, Maju Samuel, Muralikumar Anantharaman and Emelia  Sithole-Matarise
 
 reuters.com
 
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