VMware says it’s looking to acquire Pivotal
   Frederic Lardinois @fredericl / 13 hours ago
 
    VMware  today  confirmed that it is in talks to acquire software development platform  Pivotal Software,  the service best known for commercializing the open-source Cloud  Foundry platform. The proposed transaction would see VMware acquire all  outstanding Pivotal Class A stock for $15 per share, a significant  markup over Pivotal’s current share price (which unsurprisingly shot up  right after the announcement).
  Pivotal’s shares have struggled  since the company’s IPO in April 2018. The company was originally spun  out of EMC Corporation (now DellEMC) and VMware  in 2012  to focus on Cloud Foundry, an open-source software development platform  that is currently in use by the majority of Fortune 500 companies. A  lot of these enterprises are working with Pivotal to support their Cloud  Foundry efforts. Dell itself continues to own the majority of VMware  and Pivotal, and VMware also owns an interest in Pivotal already and  sells Pivotal’s services to its customers, as well. It’s a bit of an  ouroboros of a transaction.
  Pivotal  Cloud Foundry was always the company’s main product, but it also  offered additional consulting services on top of that. Despite improving  its execution since going public, Pivotal still lost $31.7 million in  its  last financial quarter  as its stock price traded at just over half of the IPO price. Indeed,  the $15 per share VMware is offering is identical to Pivotal’s IPO  price.
  An acquisition by VMware would bring Pivotal’s journey full  circle, though this is surely not the journey the Pivotal team  expected. VMware is a  Cloud Foundry Foundation   platinum member, together with Pivotal, DellEMC, IBM, SAP and Suse, so I  wouldn’t expect any major changes in VMware’s support of the overall  open-source ecosystem behind Pivotal’s core platform.
  It remains  to be seen whether the acquisition will indeed happen, though. In a  press release, VMware acknowledged the discussion between the two  companies but noted that “there can be no assurance that any such  agreement regarding the potential transaction will occur, and VMware  does not intend to communicate further on this matter unless and until a  definitive agreement is reached.” That’s the kind of sentence lawyers  like to write. I would be quite surprised if this deal didn’t happen,  though.
  Buying Pivotal would also make sense in the grand scheme of VMware’s recent acquisitions. Earlier this year, the company  acquired Bitnami,  and last year it acquired Heptio, the startup founded by two of the  three co-founders of the Kubernetes project, which now forms the basis  of many new enterprise cloud deployments and, most recently, Pivotal  Cloud Foundry.
  techcrunch.com |