Mark and all,
This is from wsj :
Borland to Purchase Visigenic In Deal Valued at $150 million
Dow Jones Newswires
Borland International Inc., a maker of software-development tools, said Tuesday that it plans to buy Visigenic Software Inc., a developer of so-called object-based programming tools, in a stock swap with an indicated value of about $142 million, or $9.84 a share.
Borland, based in Scotts Valley, Calif., said Visigenic shareholders will receive 0.81988 Borland share for each Visigenic common share. Shares of Borland settled at $12 Monday. Visigenic, of San Mateo, Calif., had about 14.4 million shares outstanding as of Sept. 30, meaning the deal would be valued at some $141.7 million. Borland said it will issue about 12.5 million shares in the transaction, which it expects to complete in the first quarter of next year.
Borland said the boards of both companies have approved the acquisition but shareholders of both firms still have to vote on the deal.
Borland last month surprised analysts by posting a slight profit, a big step in turning itself around. For its second quarter ended Sept. 30, Borland said net income was $1.5 million, or three cents a share, compared to a net loss of $14.3 million, or 40 cents a share, in the same period a year ago. Sales, meanwhile, were $42.5 million, up 8%.
Once the provider of general-purpose application programs, Borland was forced by declining sales to focus on selling software-programming products aimed at industry professionals. Borland has been struggling to find a successful formula for several years since retreating from a broad effort to compete with Microsoft Corp. and others with mainstream programs such as spreadsheets.
Borland has emphasized a subcategory of products used to develop large-scale software for corporations. It also has began charging fees for most of its technical-support services, and is shifting its marketing efforts away from direct-mail and print ads and more toward the Internet.
Visigenic has incurred significant losses and negative cash flow, largely because of product-development, sales and merger costs. For the quarter ended in September, Visigenic reported a net loss of $3.6 million, or 25 cents per share, compared with a net loss of $2.3 million, or 18 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose 26% to $5.6 million.
Visigenic says its business has shifted "dramatically," to the point that the majority of its revenue comes from sales of object request broker, or ORB, software technology as opposed to database-software tools. Visigenic's core product, VisiBroker, enables software from various developers to communicate with each other. Netscape Communications Corp. and Hitachi Ltd. have products that use Visigenic's technology. Other companies, including Oracle Corp. and Novell Inc. also have said they will use Visigenic technology.
In September, Visigenic bought German consulting firm Interactive Objects Software GmbH for about $3 million. Interactive Objects had been working with Visigenic's competitor, Iona Technologies PLC, but the companies had a falling out, industry sources said. Visigenic went public last summer.
Shares of Borland traded on the Nasdaq early Tuesday at $11.1875, off 81.25 cents. Visigenic's shares traded early Tuesday at $8.1875, up $2.9375.
Object-based programming refers to software programs written in building-block fashion, a more efficient process than traditional line-by-line code writing. Objects, or components, are chunks of programming and data that can be used over and over again in different programs. Because the same blocks of information are used repeatedly, it is easy for programmers to understand each others' work and make changes simply and quickly.
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BPP |