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Technology Stocks : Oracle Corporation (ORCL) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hueyone who wrote (18105)6/11/2003 12:52:01 AM
From: Night Writer  Respond to of 19079
 
UPDATE 1-PeopleSoft drops merger suit threat, Oracle says

(Adds J.D. Edwards comment, details, background)
LOS ANGELES, June 10 (Reuters) - Oracle Corp.<ORCL.O>, the
world's second largest software maker, said on Tuesday that
rival PeopleSoft Inc.<PSFT.O> had dropped plans to file a
lawsuit to block Oracle's $5.1 billion hostile takeover bid.
"We are hopeful that this apparent change in course
indicates that the PeopleSoft Board will be willing to meet
with us to discuss our offer," Oracle Executive Vice President
Safra Catz said in a statement.
PeopleSoft could not be reached immediately for comment but
the company has dismissed Oracle's bid as an attempt to disrupt
its own friendly acquisition of Denver-based J.D. Edwards &
Co.<JDEC.O>
Redwood Shores, California-based Oracle on Friday announced
its plan to bypass Pleasanton, California-based PeopleSoft's
management and acquire the company by offering stockholders $16
per share in cash.
Shares in PeopleSoft have since traded above that offer,
indicating that investors see a chance for Oracle to raise its
bid or for another suitor to emerge.
PeopleSoft's purchase of J.D. Edwards & Co.<JDEC.O> in a
stock deal valued at $1.85 billion would allow it to overtake
Oracle in the market for business applications such as
accounting, purchasing and human resources.
Germany's SAP AG <SAPG.DE><SAP.N> is the leader in that
market, although Oracle is a larger software maker, second only
to Microsoft Corp.<MSFT.O>, thanks to its market-leading
database software which holds and manages data such as customer
information and addresses.
J.D. Edwards spokesman Victor Chayet said the company would
not comment on PeopleSoft's legal actions.
"PeopleSoft is taking steps to protect their shareholders
as we are. We are both focused on closing the definitive merger
agreement agreed on June 2," he said.
Oracle, which has not said whether it would seek to acquire
J.D. Edwards, said on Tuesday that it had been warned
previously by PeopleSoft that a court challenge was imminent.
"PeopleSoft decided not to commence litigation against
Oracle on June 9 and canceled its plan to appear in court
today," Oracle said.
Oracle's is one of the biggest hostile takeover bids to
rock the software industry since International Business
Machines Corp. <IBM.N> bought e-mail provider Lotus Development
Inc. in what began as an unfriendly, unsolicited bid in 1995.
The deal, which would be Oracle's largest acquisition by
far, could also be a harbinger of increased consolidation in
the software market as executives try to win customers amid
dwindling corporate spending on new technology.
PeopleSoft also has a "poison pill" involving issue of new
preferred shares that is intended to thwart a hostile takeover
and Oracle Chief Executive Larry Ellison has urged the company
to drop that defense.
((Reporting by Peter Henderson and Judy Crosson; Reuters
Messaging: peter.henderson.reuters.com@reuters.net; +1 213 955
6750 peter.henderson@reuters.com))

REUTERS
*** end of story ***