SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> No Category

Ellison talks acquisitions, mocks PeopleSoft's Conway

Ellison talks acquisitions, mocks PeopleSoft's Conway

By:  Joris Evers  On: 10 Jul 2003 For: IDG News Service Creator

Oracle Corp. executives repeated on Wednesday that more takeovers could follow the company's bid for PeopleSoft Inc. At the same time, mudslinging between Oracle and PeopleSoft continued, even though Oracle described itself as a

Oracle Corp. executives repeated on Wednesday that more takeovers could follow the company's bid for PeopleSoft Inc. At the same time, mudslinging between Oracle and PeopleSoft continued, even though Oracle described itself as a "generally friendly" company.

"We'd be interested in buying almost anything," Oracle Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison said at a meeting with financial analysts at his company's Redwood Shores, Calif., headquarters.

That is if the price is right, and "almost anything" does have its exclusions, Ellison said. Oracle won't buy Ariba Inc. or CommerceOne Inc., vendors of online marketplaces. Also, Oracle looked at buying Legato Systems Inc., but didn't because it felt it could not win from Veritas Software Corp. in storage management software space, he said.

Data storage vendor EMC Corp. on Tuesday announced a deal to buy Legato in a stock transaction valued at US$1.3 billion.

Clues on where Oracle could strike came from Executive Vice-Presidents Safra Catz and Chuck Phillips, who spoke to the analysts just before Ellison. Phillips two weeks ago hinted that Oracle may do some more shopping.

On the database side of its business, Oracle is interested in technologies that will help users reduce cost and fit with its strategy of getting more information into a database, while on the applications side Oracle wants to move further into verticals such as health care and retail, said Catz.

Also, there are new markets that Oracle would like to get into, said Phillips, without providing any more detail. Phillips was recruited to Oracle recently after years on Wall Street as an analyst covering enterprise software and is one of the main forces behind Oracle's bid for PeopleSoft.

"We generate a tremendous amount of cash and we have been using that cash to buy back our stock. We could have been using that money for acquisitions," said Ellison.

Oracle prefers friendly acquisitions whereby the takeover target agrees to be bought, instead of a prey resisting to be devoured, said Catz. "Our preference is to do something friendly, but friendliness was not going to be a possibility here. Out hopes are that all our deals are friendly," she said. Added Phillips: "We are generally friendly people."

Ellison vowed to continue to pursue PeopleSoft, even if it takes a year to get the deal done, and said that the Pleasanton, Calif., vendor could not survive on its own in a consolidating enterprise software market.

"It is going to get very, very tough out there and they are just not big enough company, a strong enough company to be competitive," he said.

Oracle launched a US$5.1 billion hostile takeover bid for PeopleSoft in early June, days after PeopleSoft said it would buy J.D. Edwards & Co. Oracle later sweetened its bid to US$6.3 billion.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 444   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Joris Evers Joris Evers is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Oracle's Ellison takes aim at SAP
Oracle's Ellison takes aim at SAPWith PeopleSoft vanquished, Oracle Corp. Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison is setting his sights on the industry's leading business applications vendor, SAP AG. As SAP announced financial results Wednesday showing booming growth in its U.S. business, Ellison told a gathering of financial analysts that Oracle welcomes increased competition with SAP and believes that in any technology shootout its middleware stack will stomp SAP's flat.
Ellison says customers should feel Oracle’s pain
Ellison says customers should feel Oracle’s painOracle Corp. CEO Larry Ellison says businesses should build a single IT infrastructure, even though it took his own company five agonizing years to create one for itself.
Ellison talks acquisitions, mocks Conway
Ellison talks acquisitions, mocks ConwayOracle Corp. executives recently said that more takeovers could follow the company’s bid for PeopleSoft Inc. At the same time, mudslinging between Oracle and PeopleSoft continued.
Why Oracle is finally going after BEA
if you’re a technology firm and you’re acquired by another company, you must have been doing something right. in bea’s case, an offer to be acquired by oracle suggests the company might have bee
blog comments powered by Disqus