Chipmaker raises bid for Qualcomm

Visitors look at a display booth for Qualcomm at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing in April. Rival chipmaker Broadcom has increased its buyout offer for Qualcomm to more than $121 billion in what Broadcom calls its “best and final” offer.
Visitors look at a display booth for Qualcomm at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing in April. Rival chipmaker Broadcom has increased its buyout offer for Qualcomm to more than $121 billion in what Broadcom calls its “best and final” offer.

Broadcom Ltd. increased its offer to Qualcomm Inc.'s shareholders by $16 billion, ratcheting up the pressure on its rival chipmaker to negotiate while deriding Qualcomm's plan for independence as "pie in the sky."

"Any rational board would engage with us," Broadcom Chief Executive Officer Hock Tan said. "It's an offer that provides more value to the shareholders of Qualcomm than any stand-alone value that Qualcomm has tried, or may think they can try, to create."

Broadcom early Monday raised its bid for Qualcomm to about $121 billion in an attempt to force what could be the largest-ever technology company deal. The new offer of $82 per share is 17 percent higher than an opening proposal in November that was rejected. It's the "best and final" proposal, Broadcom said.

Tan is raising the stakes for Qualcomm Chief Executive Officer Steve Mollenkopf to either talk or face a March shareholder vote that could oust his board. Investors contacted by Bloomberg at the time of the initial bid said they would need more than $80 per share to side with Broadcom.

Qualcomm said Monday that it had received Broadcom's revised proposal and would review the offer before responding.

Mollenkopf dismissed the earlier bid as not even warranting consideration, and his team has avoided responding to outreach, according to Tan. The two men disagree on the future of the industry and have opposing views on how a semiconductor company should be run. Broadcom believes the boom years are over and that high spending to get into new areas is a waste of shareholder money. Qualcomm's leaders argue that a new growth surge is just around the corner.

A combination of the two companies would cap more than two years of consolidation in the semiconductor industry and create the world's third-largest chipmaker, with products in almost all smartphones.

Qualcomm has argued that regulators would be unlikely to quickly, if ever, approve such a combination. Tan has said he's already identified two minor businesses that overlap and has assured regulators that he'd spin them off to speed the approval process. Broadcom also has started regulatory approval processes in the U.S., China and the European Union, company antitrust lawyer Daniel Wall, of Latham and Watkins, said Monday.

Tan said he's prepared to offer a breakup fee that would be in the multiple-billions of dollars and at the high end of the range typically offered in such circumstances. He said he'll also offer shareholders payments that increase with time if regulatory approval takes longer than the year he's forecasting, something that would give Broadcom an incentive to get it done quickly.

"For Qualcomm, while the price is higher, the 'best and final' nature of the deal may be viewed as increasing the chance [Broadcom] could walk," Stacy Rasgon, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein and Co., wrote in a note to investors. "We suspect the price is still below what [Qualcomm] is looking for; at a minimum by the metrics they outlined a few weeks ago they would likely still consider an $82 bid as undervaluing them."

The offer also hinges on Qualcomm's ongoing $47 billion purchase of NXP Semiconductors NV. Investors have piled into the stock, arguing that Qualcomm's $110-a-share offer must be improved. But Broadcom said the NXP deal must either be concluded at the current offer or terminated.

On a day of broad losses for the stock market, Qualcomm shares fell $4.34, or 6.6 percent, to $61.73. Broadcom fell $7.38, or 3.1 percent, to $228.10.

Broadcom's hostile bid for the larger San Diego-based company is the latest and most audacious move by Tan in a string of deals that has made his company one of the world's largest suppliers of semiconductors. He wants Qualcomm for its leading smartphone modem chip division, an example of what he calls a "franchise" that will continue to dominate the market.

Qualcomm has countered that its future is much brighter as a stand-alone company. The chipmaker says it's on the cusp of breaking into new markets for products such as servers, personal computers and autos, putting it on a path to becoming much bigger.

That argument has been hurt by attacks on its licensing business. Regulators around the world are fining or investigating Qualcomm, supporting elements of Apple Inc.'s claims in a lawsuit against the company that it abuses its dominant position. Qualcomm has countered that it expects to eventually win in court.

The fate of Qualcomm's licensing business is key to its future. The company is unique in the chip industry because most of its profit comes from charging fees on patents that cover the fundamentals of all modern phone systems. That cash influx fuels industry-leading research and design that in turn help its chip unit build products that dominate the smartphone industry.

Investors will have to choose whether they want to take the money from Broadcom now or sit tight and hope for a favorable resolution of its legal entanglements and for the promised new market growth to kick in.

Before reports of Broadcom's initial offer in November, Qualcomm's stock had been trading at less than $55, partly because of worries its earnings would continue to be hurt by customers such as Apple refusing to pay license fees.

Information for this article was contributed by David McLaughlin of Bloomberg News.

Business on 02/06/2018

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