NEW YORK: Samsung Electronics recently offered to buy BlackBerry
Ltd for as much as $7.5 billion, seeking its valuable patents as it battles
Apple in the corporate market, according to a person familiar with the matter
and documents seen by Reuters.
South Korea’s Samsung proposed an initial price range of $13.35
to $15.49 per share, representing a premium of 38 per cent to 60pc over
BlackBerry’s current trading price, the source said on Wednesday.
Representatives from the two companies, which are working with
advisers, met last week to discuss a potential transaction, the source said,
asking not to be identified because the conversations are private.
The Waterloo, Ontario-based company said in a statement that it
“has not engaged in discussions with Samsung with respect to any possible offer
to purchase BlackBerry”. Shares of BlackBerry, which soared nearly 30pc following
the Reuters report, fell back about 15pc in after-hours electronic trading
following the statement.
Separately on Wednesday, Canadian newspaper Globe and Mail
reported BlackBerry has shunned a handful of takeover overtures in recent
months as its board and largest investor think its restructuring strategy will
deliver greater shareholder value than current acquisition offers.
The board believes offering prices, some in excess of $7bn, fall
well below BlackBerry’s potential asset value in the next few years, according
to the Globe and Mail report.
Blackberry, a one-time investor darling that pioneered smart phones,
has regained some of its lost swagger under Chief Executive John Chen, who is
leading a bid to regain market share it has lost to Apple Inc, Google Inc and
Samsung.
CORPORATE MARKET: “BlackBerry is in such
transition today, so any investment has been a bet on the future, so at this
point Samsung is cutting in before that full future becomes a reality,” said
Morningstar analyst Brian Colello.
Samsung’s strength as the no. 1 global smart phone marker has
been built on making devices for the consumer market, which has become crowded
in recent years. With a takeover of Blackberry, Samsung could make greater
inroads into the corporate market, where it has trailed rivals.
“How many Samsung phones do you see in offices? This would be
Samsung’s chance to get into the enterprise,” said BGC Partners analyst Colin
Gillis.
Any tie-up with Samsung would require the blessing of Prem
Watsa, whose Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd is a major Blackberry shareholder.
Fairfax helped bankroll a debt recapitalization that led to Chen’s arrival in
November 2013 as CEO. Paul Rivett, president of Watsa’s Fairfax Financial
Holdings, declined to comment.
The bid would also face regulatory scrutiny in both Ottawa and
Washington. Under Canadian law, any foreign takeover of BlackBerry would
require government approval under the Industry Canada Act.
BlackBerry’s secure networks manage the email traffic of
thousands of large corporate customers, along with government and military
agencies across the globe.
Samsung and its advisers also anticipate a complex approval
process at the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS),
which reviews deals for national security implication, the documents reviewed
by Reuters show.
Published in Dawn January 24th , 2015
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