EMC ups Data Domain bid as NetApp deal proceeds

By Larry Dignan , ZDNet
Tuesday, July 07, 2009 05:42 PM

EMC on Monday increased its bid for Data Domain to US$33.50 a share from US$30 a share to US$2.1 billion after NetApp's acquisition plan received regulatory clearance.

NetApp said Tuesday in a media statement that Data Domain shareholders will vote on its US$1.9 billion bid Aug. 14.

Data Domain has rejected EMC before, but money talks. EMC's new US$2.1 billion bid trumps NetApp's US$1.9 billion offer and will give shareholders something to think about all things being equal. In addition, Caris & Co. analyst Robert Cihra noted that EMC could up the ante for Data Domain repeatedly. NetApp's offer, however, would likely top out at US$35 a share.

Cihra wrote:

"Figuring no insurmountable obstacles from ongoing FTC review, we believe currently low cost/returns on cash (about 2 percent) could enable EMC to raise its all-cash bid for DDUP to as high as US$40/share and still keep the deal neutral to CY10E non-GAAP EPS (our US$0.98 estimate) without even requiring revenue/cost synergies. As such, we continue to expect EMC ultimately out-bids NTAP. Indeed, we see the only hurdles to EMC conceivably going much higher being the sustainability of today's low interest rates and a hit to GAAP EPS from intangibles amortization that starts to get unwieldy (e.g., we estimate US$0.03 already at today's US$30 bid and US$0.04 at US$40). This said, we estimate just US$50 million in added revenue and US$20 million opex savings could actually make DDUP accretive by up to +0.03 in non-GAAP EPS for CY2010 even if EMC upped its bid to US$40. In contrast, we estimate NTAP could likely only justify raising its own bid for DDUP to about US$35 AND require more than US$80 million in pre-tax revenue/cost synergies if it hoped to keep the deal non-GAAP EPS neutral for FY11."

NetApp CEO Dan Warmenhoven responded to EMC's move:

"In response to EMC's revised, unsolicited offer, the NetApp Board of Directors will carefully weigh its options, keeping in mind both its fiduciary duty to its stockholders and its disciplined acquisition strategy. We will provide an update shortly."

EMC, which extended its tender offer to midnight July 17, also said there are no regulatory hurdles from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over a Data Domain purchase. EMC also removed a break up fee. The storage giant also said it can close a Data Domain deal in two weeks.

EMC's offer may be one of the last appeals to Data Domain shareholders. NetApp also received early clearance from the FTC and said it was looking forward to a quick close on its Data Domain acquisition.

This article was first published as a blog post on ZDNet.com.


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