getgo234, Kurlak and Edelstone both mentioned in the San Jose Mercury News article below. So where's the upgrades and pop in the stock?
To K: you are doing your doggendest to turn a perceived silk purse into a sow's ear (at least WRT what all the analysts, and I ;-) have to say). Over on the Intel thread, if an AMD zealot or Cyrix religious fanatic is proven wrong (as much as you can prove anything in this business), or is a lone voice in the wind among many, many others, they generally limp off with tail between legs.
mercurycenter.com
Posted at 9:50 p.m. PDT Monday, June 29, 1998
LSI stepped in after Adaptec backed out
BY MIGUEL HELFT Mercury News Staff Writer
The objections of federal antitrust investigators pushed a Milpitas company off the altar in its bid for a Colorado chip maker last week, but they opened the door for a cross-town suitor.
On Monday, LSI Logic Corp. said it would buy chip maker Symbios Inc. for $760 million in cash only two business days after Adaptec Inc. scrapped a similar deal.
The Symbios acquisition, the largest deal in LSI Logic's 17-year history, will accelerate the company's entry into the market for chips that speed up connections between computers and storage devices.
The deal will also give Milpitas-based LSI Logic a number of semiconductor technologies that are critical to expanding its system-on-a-chip strategy, which aims to integrate multiple functions onto a single chip. For instance, functions that control the movement of data in and out of a disk-drive or a network, which currently reside on one chip, could be integrated into a computer's central processor or the chip that controls the main operations of a disk drive, thereby reducing cost.
''The deal dovetails with our corporate and product strategy,'' said Bruce Entin, vice president of worldwide customer marketing. ''We made a foray into storage. This strengthens our hand in the storage market. And having the building blocks (for the system-on-a-chip) is important.''
Entin said the deal with Symbios, a company about half the size of LSI Logic in terms of revenue and workforce, will also give the company ''critical mass.''
LSI Logic is best known for customized chips used in a number of consumer electronics products, such as the Sony PlayStation game machine, and communications products. Symbios, a Fort Collins, Colo.-based subsidiary of Hyundai Electronics America, makes adapters and chip sets used to connect server computers to storage devices and computer networks, as well as a number of other silicon technologies.
The company employs about 2,500 workers worldwide and had revenues of $620 million in 1997. That will bring LSI's workforce to nearly 6,800 and its revenues to nearly $2 billion.
LSI Logic said it had made a bid for Symbios earlier this year, when Hyundai put the company up for sale amid the deepening financial crisis in South Korea.
On Feb. 19, Adaptec, a maker of cards to connect computers and peripherals, had announced it would pay $775 million for Symbios. But just last Thursday, Adaptec, which is also based in Milpitas, called off the deal. Grant Saviers, president, chairman and chief executive of Adaptec, said the Federal Trade Commission was poised to vote to block it. Saviers said government regulators feared the deal would give Adaptec dominance of the market for a technology known as Small Computer System Interface, or SCSI.
Entin said LSI Logic had followed reports of the FTC probe and contacted Hyundai officials soon after the Adaptec deal was canceled. The deal was finalized over the weekend.
Although the LSI Logic bid for Symbios will also have to be approved by regulators, the two companies have little overlap, Entin said. ''We are very confident about FTC approval,'' he said.
LSI said it had not made specific plans to integrate the two companies and did not know whether the deal would lead to layoffs.
Analysts said the deal was a good one for LSI Logic as it helped the company diversify its business and grow in the high-volume market for storage technology chips. The company is looking for ways to revive its stagnant growth. Its profit fell 21 percent last quarter because of dropping semiconductor prices.
''I think it is positive,'' said Tom Kurlak, an analyst with Merrill Lynch. ''This more than doubles their storage business.''
''I think they are buying a very inexpensive business that is synergistic with their foray into the storage market,'' said Mark Edelstone, an analyst with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
Saviers acknowledged the deal will put Adaptec in more direct competition with LSI Logic but said he wasn't concerned.
''We know where we compete with each,'' he said, referring to Symbios and LSI Logic. ''Adding the two together, I don't think is a real change in the landscape.''
LSI Logic said the deal should be completed in the quarter ending Sept. 30 and should add to the company's earnings in 1999. LSI Logic will spend about $200 million of its cash reserves, which surpass $400 million, and will pay for the rest of the deal through debt financing. LSI Logic's share rose 19 cents on news of the deal, to close at $23.31. |