Broadcom to Buy Network Gear Maker Brocade for $5.5 Billion

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Broadcom to Buy Network Gear Maker Brocade for $5.5 Billion

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Broadcom known for its connectivity chips used in mobiles and servers
  • Broadcom said it planned to sell Brocade’s networking business
  • Company’s top customers include Cisco, Hewlett Packard and Intel

Chipmaker Broadcom Ltd said it would buy Brocade Communications Systems Inc for $5.5 billion (roughly rs. 36,672 crores), pushing deeper into the fast-growing market for network equipment used in data centers.

The deal, the latest in a consolidating chip sector, will allow Broadcom to corner a larger share of the data center products market by using Brocade’s fiber channel switches that speed up data transfer between servers and storage devices.

Singapore-based Broadcom, formerly Avago Technologies, is known for its connectivity chips used in products ranging from mobiles to servers, while California-based Brocade makes networking switches, software and storage products.

“We believe the deal is highly complementary to Broadcom’s existing enterprise storage offerings and boosts its exposure to the high-growth data center market,” CFRA Research Angelo Zino said.

The market for IT infrastructure products is expected to expand rapidly. Total spending on cloud infrastructure, including server, storage and ethernet switches, will increase by 15.5 percent to $37.1 billion in 2016, according to research firm IDC.

Broadcom said it planned to sell Brocade’s networking business, which makes controllers and access points that help businesses offer high-speed internet to their customers, to avoid competing with its top customers such as Cisco.The $12.75 per share offer represents a premium of 46.7 percent to Brocade’s close on Friday.

Brocade’s shares were up 9.5 percent at $12.31, while Broadcom’s stock rose 1.7 percent to $171.73.

Up to Tuesday’s close, Brocade’s shares had gained nearly 30 percent since Bloomberg reported on Monday that the company was in talks to sell itself.

The chip industry has been undergoing rapid consolidation as companies try to capture market share, much of it related to connected devices and cars, and Avago/Broadcom has been one of the sector’s most prolific acquirers.

Since taking over the top job at Avago a decade ago, Chief Executive Hock Tan has turned around a small chipmaker into a giant with a market capitalization of $67 billion.

In the biggest chip deal ever, smartphone chipmaker Qualcomm Inc agreed last week to buy NXP Semiconductors NV for about $38 billion, making it the leading supplier to the fast-growing automotive chips market.

The Qualcomm-NXP deal topped Avago’s $37 billion acquisition of Broadcom Corp last year that formed Broadcom Ltd.

Broadcom’s top customers include Cisco, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Intel Corp.

A big part of Brocade’s networking business that Broadcom plans to divest was acquired as part of Brocade’s $1.5 billion acquisition of Ruckus Wireless earlier this year. The unit generated $209 million in product revenue in the third quarter.

“I don’t think there will be a lack in buyers for the IP business,” Drexel Hamilton analyst Cody Acree told Reuters, adding that companies such as Cisco, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and some Chinese firms are trying to make headway in the space.

Reuters reported on Tuesday that a Broadcom-Brocade deal was imminent.

Broadcom said it would take on about $400 million of Brocade’s debt and fund the deal with available cash and debt.

Evercore was Brocade’s financial adviser.

© Thomson Reuters 2016

Tags: Braodcom, Brocade, Acquisition, Internet, PC, Laptops, Mobiles, Tablets, Telecom, Home Entertainment
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