Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Twin bombs go off in Baghdad as Negroponte wraps up visit

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Bombs exploded outside the Iraqi capital's tightly guarded Green Zone on Tuesday as US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte wrapped up a visit focusing on a controversial military pact.

Two powerful explosions went off in quick succession at a time of heavy traffic.An Iraqi security official said a soldier and six civilians were wounded in the attack on the edge of the Green Zone.

Inside the zone, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told reporters an agreement was "very close," but nothing was final. However, there were "new ideas and new language" on a mutually acceptable deal with the US, he said.

"This needs some bold political decisions now," he added.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Hewlett-Packard in talks to buy Electronic Data Systems Corp to compete with International Business Machines Corp

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Hewlett-Packard Co is in talks to buy technology outsourcing company Electronic Data Systems Corp for $12 billion to $13 billion in a deal which would vault it to a close second to IBM in technology services.

The acquisition would be HP's biggest since its $19 billion acquisition of Compaq in 2002. Shares of EDS rose nearly 28 percent, taking its market value to about $12 billion.

HP shares fell nearly 5 percent amid some skepticism that slow-growing EDS, still considered in turnaround mode, would provide more than a one-time boost, and might not be worth a premium of as much as 37 percent.

A source briefed on the matter told Reuters about the talks and that the plan was to announce a deal by the close of Tuesday. The Wall Street Journal first reported the discussions, and later HP and EDS both said they were in talks about a business combination but gave no details.

"While Hewlett-Packard has over time built up its own outsourcing practice, this clearly is a move by Mark Hurd to challenge IBM in the services area," said David Garrity, director of research at Dinosaur Securities, referring to HP's chief executive.

A bigger HP could compete better against International Business Machines Corp going after large clients and help it keep costs in line, analysts said. If HP completes the acquisition, it would be by far the largest under CEO Hurd.

"It would put Hewlett-Packard in the sweet spot of an IT spending trend. It would definitely improve their position against IBM," said CRT Capital Group analyst Ashok Kumar.

SKEPTICISM ABOUT TARGET

HP has long considered an acquisition to beef up its tech services business, a sector that offers relatively stable income and high margins even in an economic downturn.

Worldwide computer services revenue rose 10.5 percent to $748 billion in 2007, according to data released on Monday by market research firm Gartner Inc.

IBM continued to be the leader, with 7.2 percent share. EDS weighed in at No. 2, with 3.0 percent of the market, while HP was No. 5, with 2.2 percent market share.

Together HP and EDS would have roughly $39.4 billion in services revenue, compared with IBM's $54.1 billion last year.

"HP gains a very strong No. 2 position in total services market share and professional services market share behind IBM," said Gartner analyst Allie Young.

If EDS were to remain independent it would have a tough time holding on to its number 2 slot in IT services market, Young said.

EDS brings to HP a strong base in infrastructure outsourcing, Young said. But neither HP nor EDS is strong in high-end consulting, which is a strong suit for IBM.

Yet there was some skepticism about HP's target, EDS.

"Unless HP has some synergies where they can dramatically impact earnings growth of EDS, I'm not sure why they'd want to buy it," said Jim Huguet, co-chief executive at Great Companies LLC. He noted that EDS's earnings growth has averaged 2.8 percent.

"EDS is trading at about half its historical PE, so they're obviously seeing it as a value, which it is if you can generate earnings growth at 15-20 percent. But my question is whether it will become a drain on Hewlett-Packard?"

In April, EDS reported a 62 percent decline in first quarter profit, though the results had topped Wall Street expectations. Despite the beat, analysts said EDS faced intense competition from Indian rivals and saw little catalyst for growth.

"Growth could temporarily stall but then the opportunity is for the merged operations to be extremely strong and competitive," Young said.

Besides HP and IBM, EDS also competes with Accenture Ltd and Computer Sciences Corp in the United States, as well as Indian companies Infosys Technologies Ltd , Tata Consultancy Services Ltd and Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp.

"EDS has been relatively stagnant over the past few years. HP has been trying to promote themselves as a major services organization over the past few years. This will certainly help them with that," said Chad Hersh, an analyst at Novarica.

EDS has cut thousands of jobs to boost profits, and also is generating revenue from contracts including a lucrative deal last year with the U.S. Navy.

"We believe that Hewlett would be acquiring a fairly clean book of business, at least one that has been well scrubbed. So there shouldn't be any untoward surprises," Garrity said.

In 2000, HP pulled out of talks to buy the consulting business of Price water house Coopers for as much as $18 billion. IBM in October 2002 closed its $3.5 billion acquisition of Price water house Coopers' consulting division.

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Saturday, May 03, 2008

Microsoft, Yahoo could reach weekend deal: sources

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Microsoft Corp and Yahoo Inc are making last-minute efforts to seal a deal before Microsoft takes its Yahoo bid hostile or abandons it altogether, sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Microsoft may raise its offer, now worth $42.2 billion, by a few dollars per share from an initial $31 per share to complete a deal as soon as this weekend, a person familiar with Microsoft's thinking said.

But talks are at a "sensitive stage" and a deal is not certain, sources familiar with the situation said.

Investors bet an agreement was likely, sending Yahoo shares up 7 percent to $28.67 on the first news of significant contact between the sides since Microsoft's deadline for its initial offer expired last Saturday.

"My sense is Microsoft is considering raising their price to the mid-$30s," said a San Francisco-based portfolio manager who owns both Yahoo and Microsoft shares, but would not be identified due to a company policy regarding shares that are actively traded.

Yahoo had previously refused to enter formal negotiations with Microsoft, saying the initial price it made public in February did not properly value Yahoo's search and display advertising technology, or its overseas holdings.

Every dollar added to the per-share price amounts to about $1.4 billion extra for the total deal at current prices, and Microsoft shareholders have questioned how much higher the company should go.

"If it's $35 or less, I think it's fine," said the portfolio manager, whose company owned 21.2 million shares of Microsoft and 1.93 million Yahoo shares as of the end of December.

NO QUICK EMBRACE

A deal could give Microsoft a stronger foothold in its battle with Internet search leader Google Inc, which is rapidly expanding into the software maker's own turf with new Web-based applications.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer indicated on Thursday he might sweeten the bid after weeks of saying publicly that his offer was fair as it stood.

"I know exactly what I think Yahoo is worth to me, exactly," Ballmer said at a meeting with Microsoft employees. "I won't go a dime above, and I will go to what I think it's worth if that gets the deal done."

Yahoo executives have repeatedly said the company was not averse to a deal with Microsoft at a higher price.

But in a sign of its reluctance, Yahoo has courted a possible deal with Time Warner Inc's AOL division and a search advertising partnership with Google.

Yahoo is still in talks on an alternative to the Microsoft bid, sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

For its part, Microsoft has made clear it will not wait much longer. Ballmer said on Thursday that walking away was one of three options, along with striking a friendly deal or launching a hostile bid, and to expect an announcement shortly.

Microsoft shares fell 0.5 percent to close at $29.24. Yahoo shares closed at $28.67, up nearly 7 percent on the day.

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