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To: Charles Tutt who wrote (46329)11/11/2001 12:04:40 AM
From: Ron Mgrublian  Respond to of 64865
 
Just doing my duty, reading the LA Times Business section.

EMachines Director Offers a Buyout
Acquisition: The founding member is willing to pay $117.5 million in cash for
the low-cost PC maker.

By JAMES S. GRANELLI, TIMES STAFF WRITER

EMachines Inc., which recently called off a search for an
investor or buyer, said Friday that one of its founding directors
has offered to purchase the company for $117.5 million in cash,
well above its current market value.

In a letter to the Irvine maker of low-cost personal computers,
director Lap Shun "John" Hui of Garden Grove said his offer of
78 cents a share already has received support from investors
holding 55% of the stock. He owns about 1.1%.

Hui also revealed in his letter that his offer, made public late
Friday, is an extension of a bid he made privately Oct. 30 for the
nation's third-largest vendor of desktop PCs in stores. The offer
had been due to expire last Tuesday. The extension from one of
Hui's companies, EM Holdings Inc., is scheduled to expire
Wednesday. EMachines, which dropped Credit Suisse First
Boston as a financial advisor in September, rehired the
investment banking firm to evaluate the offer.

Hui's offer was a friendly one that the company expected, said
his spokeswoman, Diana L. Maranon. Hui would not comment. Wayne R. Inouye, EMachines'
president, concurred, though he said Hui's initial offer caught him off guard.

"There aren't very many companies like EMachines--trading at a fraction of its cash value with
very little debt, and with market share increasing in a market that is contracting," Inouye said.

Executives told Wall Street analysts in releasing quarterly results Oct. 23 that money-losing
EMachines, struggling to gain its financial footing, would break even or post a slight profit for the
final three months of the year.

Hui's offer is 81% higher than Friday's closing price of 43 cents a share, down 5 cents, in
over-the-counter trading. Removed from Nasdaq after its shares fell below $1 this year, EMachines
stock sank to 14 cents a share two months ago but has climbed steadily since.

Hui needs support from holders of at least 90% of the shares to complete a so-called short-form
merger, a method for acquiring a company with a minimum of delays and red tape.

For information about reprinting this article, go to lats.com

latimes.com