By
Martin Lamonica
Friday, April 30 2004 11:11 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39177655,00.htm
BMC Software plans to spend US$239 million to acquire Marimba, continuing a
consolidation trend in the management software arena.
BMC said Thursday that once the cash transaction is complete, the company
will incorporate Marimba's configuration management software into its Remedy
line of customer support and network management software. Taking into account
Marimba's cash balance, the net purchase price will be US$187 million. The company
expects to complete the purchase in the second quarter.
Also Thursday, BMC announced its financial results for its fiscal fourth
quarter, which ended March 31. The company said its revenue climbed 5 percent to
US$400 million, compared with the same period a year ago. Its net earnings on a
GAAP basis were US$36.9 million, or 16 US cents per share, compared with US$20.6
million in the same period last year.
Excluding special items, the company's earnings were US$40.8 million, or 18
US cents per diluted common share. On this basis, the company missed its own
guidance range of 21 US cents to 25 US cents per share. An analysts' consensus figure
was not immediately available from First Call.
BMC makes administration software for
running company networks. In 2002, it acquired software company Remedy from Peregrine Systems.
The company intends to fill out the Remedy product line with Marimba's tools
for automatically sending out software updates, the company said.
Paul Crisci, managing director of Broadview International, a division of
Jeffries and Co., advised Marimba on the deal. Crispi said that once Marimba's
two main rivals--On Technology and Novadigm--were acquired by Symantec and
Hewlett-Packard, respectively, it made sense for Marimba to look for a larger
company to buy it.
"Suddenly having Symantec and HP competing against you, the odds are stacked
against you," Crisci said. "The larger players are consolidating this entire
market segment. This particular functionality (that Marimba provides) is very
critical."
Marimba was launched in 1996 and was
closely associated with much-hyped "push technology" for sending content and
data out to desktop computers. The Mountain View, Calif.-based company, founded
by former Sun Microsystems executive Kim Polese, sells software for
automatically sending software patches and updates to computers over corporate
networks and mobile devices.
Polese left the chief executive position in 2000 and stepped down as chairman of the
company's board in November.
The BMC acquisition follows a number of other purchases in the systems
management area during the past year. IBM purchased Candle last month to fill
out its management software line, and Hewlett-Packard has acquired a number of smaller
management companies.
Marimba on Thursday said that its revenue for the first quarter this year
slipped to US$8.3 million, down from US$10.1 million during the same period last
year. The net loss for the first quarter was US$1.2 million.