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Oracle snags BEA for US$8.5B

Oracle snags BEA for US$8.5B

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 15 Jan 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Nearly three months after its initial offer was turned down by BEA’s board of directors, Oracle has now agreed to buy BEA Systems. An analyst says Oracle was in a hurry to close the deal so it could bring its Fusion products to market.

Redwood City, Calif.-based Oracle Corp. announced Wednesday it has agreed to buy BEA Systems Inc. for about US$8.5 billion, or $19.375 per share.

Shane Schick's Computerworld

The BEA-all and the end-all

The agreement follows a previous bid last October by Oracle for $17 a share, an amount that was turned down by the middleware vendor's board of directors. BEA’s subsequent $21 per share counteroffer was rejected.

Following the announcement, Sheryl Kingstone, director of the enterprise research group with Boston, Mass.-based Yankee Group Research Inc., said the previous bid was below BEA stock value at the time, but “now the stocks are going down.”

“It’s a great offer, so now they’ve met their financial terms, which was one of the sticklers in the past,” said Kingstone.

Oracle was motivated to arrive at a deal earlier rather than later, she said, because it’s currently in the process of “really trying to come to market by 2009 with more of the Fusion Middleware, Fusion apps.” And, she added, BEA’s strong infrastructure offerings will enhance the Fusion suite.

Despite the companies’ overlapping portfolios, said Kingstone, the fact that BEA is a best of breed infrastructure middleware vendor is a good thing because it “is the future of where they need to go with bringing together components of all the different apps.”

Following BEA’s initial rejection of Oracle’s bid last October, David O'Connell, senior analyst with Wellesley, Mass.-based Nucleus Research, didn’t dismiss the possibility of a future agreement between the two parties especially considering he thought the fit was evident. "It would have made a really good match. But you never say never. An opportunity could come around again."

David Senf, director of security and software research with Toronto, Ont.-based analyst firm IDC Canada, also then agreed that the union would be beneficial to Oracle. In particular, he said, it would garner Oracle more customers considering it’s had difficulty moving beyond its installed base; gain deeper traction in certain verticals; block rivals IBM Corp. and SAP AG; and expand its product portfolio around high-end middleware and business process management, for added cross-sell opportunity.

Also in October, another analyst shared thoughts on the possible impact of the union on the middleware space. Yefim Natis, vice-president and Gartner-distinguished analyst with Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc., suggested that Red Hat Inc. and JBoss would be “somewhat of a beneficiary of this” because unhappy customers might leave BEA/Oracle for the rival independent middleware vendor.

From IT World Canada

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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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