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Well, it
happened. The King is dead, long live the King!! PeopleSoft has
been acquired by the Oracle corporation. First of all..
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I found this article that I think gives a good overview about
the situation.
Oracle buys PeopleSoft for $10 billion
Published: December 13, 2004, 6:18 AM PST
update PeopleSoft's board of directors has
approved a takeover deal with Oracle worth around $10.3 billion,
ending a long-running and bitter battle and creating a bigger
software maker.
Oracle had been scheduled to appear in court Monday for a
hearing on PeopleSoft's "poison pill" antitakeover defense. The
lawsuit was one of several that had been filed in the course of
the hostile takeover bid.
Instead, Oracle announced Monday that PeopleSoft's board had
agreed to a deal valuing PeopleSoft at $26.50 per share, higher
than Oracle's
"final bid" of $24, and a roughly 10 percent premium over
PeopleSoft's closing price Friday.
"Their maintenance revenue was higher than we thought and
their expense number was lower than we thought. It showed their
maintenance business was more profitable than we thought," Larry
Ellison, Oracle's chief executive, said in a conference call
early Monday with analysts.
This realization about PeopleSoft's maintenance business
occurred after Oracle was able to review its rival's financial
books as part of the negotiation process, Ellison said. "Before
we were allowed to look at their books, our estimates had to be
conservative."
The deal between the business software makers is expected to
close at the end of January. Oracle said the merger should add
about 1 cent per share to its bottom line starting in the fourth
quarter of its fiscal year, and 2 cents per quarter in fiscal
2006.
The company also indicated that it intends to provide a
lifeline for companies using software from PeopleSoft and J.D.
Edwards, which PeopleSoft itself acquired during the course of
its 18-month battle with Oracle.
Oracle plans to retain senior engineers from the two software
makers to develop an upgrade to PeopleSoft 8 and to roll out a
PeopleSoft 9 and J.D. Edwards 6 in the next 12 to 24 months,
Ellison said. He added that the PeopleSoft and J.D. Edwards
development teams would operate separately from Oracle's
engineering team.
"We will also take senior engineers from Oracle and have them
work with PeopleSoft engineers in developing a combined product.
PeopleSoft 10 would likely be the merged product...PeopleSoft 10
is likely 30 to 36 months out," Ellison said.
Although Oracle plans to reduce its research and development
budget by $150 million for the combined company, Ellison said
the cut is expected to spread equally between Oracle and
PeopleSoft.
Some members of PeopleSoft's sales team will be retained
after the merger to increase Oracle's current sales staff by 50
percent, Ellison said.
PeopleSoft's board said the final offer "provides good value"
for the company.
"After careful consideration, we believe this revised offer
provides good value for PeopleSoft stockholders and represents a
substantial increase in value from October. PeopleSoft is a
strong and vibrant company," A. George "Skip" Battle, chairman
of PeopleSoft's transaction committee, said in a release.
"This has been a long, emotional struggle, and our employees
have consistently performed well under the most challenging of
circumstances. The Board salutes our employees for their
outstanding dedication to PeopleSoft and is grateful to our
customers who have continued to buy our products and stand by us
during these uncertain times," Battle said.
PeopleSoft said the two companies would stay the various
ongoing lawsuits over the merger and dismiss them once the deal
is final. Beyond sparring with PeopleSoft over the poison pill
defense, Oracle has fought with the
Department of Justice,
European Regulators, and various
shareholder groups to win PeopleSoft.
The battle over the deal also
cost former PeopleSoft CEO Craig Conway
his job.
The deal will create a major force in the software world, and
could bring significant customer revenue to Oracle.
"We will have twice as many customers and be the No. 1
applications vendor in North America and in banking," Ellison
said. "We will also be strong in health care and government. And
the merger will also give us a strong installed base to sell
into."
There has been concern among PeopleSoft customers that Oracle
would no longer continue support for various PeopleSoft
applications, including ones acquired from PeopleSoft's purchase
of rival software maker J.D. Edwards.
But last week, Oracle President Safra Katz said
the company would "oversupport" PeopleSoft's existing 12,750
customers to help keep their business if a merger were clinched.
Separately, Oracle reported on Monday that its net income
rose 32 percent in the second quarter on strong database
software sales.
The company reported second-quarter net income of $815
million, or 16 cents per share, compared with $617 million, or
12 cents a share, a year earlier.
Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of
around 14 cents per share.
Revenue climbed by 10 percent, to $2.76 billion, fueled by a
14 percent growth in new software license sales, Oracle said.
Ellison said the PeopleSoft merger will satisfy his company's
appetite for major mergers for a while.
"We have been clear that we'd entertain other acquisitions,
but we won't do any other major mergers until it's clear to us
we have integrated this one to our satisfaction," Ellison said.
A major merger, he explained, is one that carries a price tag in
excess of $200 million.
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