Paul Jacobs explores buyout options for Qualcomm, may resign from board: reports
A complicated drama is playing out at wireless silicon specialist
Qualcomm, thanks to its former chairman, Paul Jacobs. He is reportedly
considering stepping down from the board at the chipmaker, after it
became known that he was exploring opportunities to acquire the wireless
leader and take it private.
People familiar with the matter told the
Financial Times that Jacobs approached several investors to explore funding
options for a takeover, including Japan’s SoftBank Group, which owns its own
silicon company, ARM Holdings. Other sources have
said that Jacobs may exit the board.
Last week, Jacobs was stripped of his executive chairman title, likely in
an effort to appease the angry shareholders who have increasingly questioned
the company’s leadership. That move came as the company tried to fend off a
$117 billion hostile takeover bid by rival chipmaker Broadcom, a deal that
was quickly
blocked by President Donald Trump on the basis of a national security argument.
RELATED: Broadcom/Qualcomm:
What happens now?
Jacobs’ attempt to take Qualcomm private may be a buzzer-beater effort to
preserve his family’s influence at the company; his father originally founded
the company. But Jacobs now owns less than 1% of Qualcomm, so he would need to
pull off a leveraged buyout of more than $120 billion (Qualcomm has a market
cap of $88.7 billion), an unprecedented feat. Also, given the fact that the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States blocked the Broadcom deal
(it has a Singapore registration even though it’s run by U.S. citizens
and plans
to relocate to the U.S.), any effort to court overseas funding
sources, such as SoftBank’s
Vision fund, seems unlikely to win regulator favor.
But even with low chances of success, the move, if undertaken in earnest,
would force the board to evaluate other suitors as part of its fiduciary
responsibility, essentially hanging out a “for sale” sign on the San Diego
company’s front lawn.
Even without Jacobs forcing the issue, a sale may yet be in the offing
for Qualcomm whether the board likes it or not. Qualcomm’s share price is down
6.5% this year, and it also faces a big concern over its cash-cow technology
licensing business, after Apple’s
successful lawsuit and the loss of the iPhone-maker’s $2 billion in
annual royalties. That has led to shareholders expressing deep displeasure with
the company’s management, an issue that Qualcomm will be hard-pressed to escape
anytime soon.
Culled
from fiercewireless
Comments
Post a Comment