Lenovo considering purchase
Palm
is having a very hard time in the smartphone market both in the U.S.
and abroad. The company is seeing its profits drop and its handsets
are failing to sell in the numbers that the company and analysts
expect.
The poor sales of its handsets have led the
company to step back and look at what it needs to do to ensure
profitability and the survival of what was once one of the most
popular brands in the industry. Palm is considering all options,
including selling the company. Palm reportedly started looking for a
buyer earlier this month. One of the early firms that were looking
into acquiring Palm was rival smartphone maker HTC.
HTC has
passed on the deal after looking at Palm's books. The most
likely remaining candidate for the purchase is computer
maker Lenovo. Lenovo has a line of handsets that it sells in its home
Chinese market, but the Lenovo handset line has no foothold in the
U.S. market.
Analyst Lu Chialin from Macquarie Securities in
Taipei said, "A most suitable candidate will be a mainland
Chinese company. They've got a lot more free cash and don't have the
brand presence in the United States, so that will all give them that
boost they need."
Reuters reports
that its sources in investment banking have confirmed that Lenovo is
considering a bid for Palm, but offered no specifics. Lenovo has
offered no official statements on its intent to make a bid for Palm,
but its stock has risen on the rumor of purchase.
Lenovo is
reported to have the cash on hand it would need to purchase Palm if
it chooses – at the end of 2009, Lenovo had $2.4 billion in cash.
Palm is reportedly looking for about $1.3 billion from suitors. While
the possibility of an outright sale is on the table at Palm, the
company also has other plans. One of the possibilities would be to
license its webOS to other companies to use on their
smartphones.
Palm may also simply choose to continue as
an independent company. Financial
Times reports
that Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein believes that Palm can
continue and survive. Rubinstein says he is "bullish"
on the long-term prospects of Palm. He stated, "I believe Palm
can survive as an independent company. We have a plan that gets us to
profitability."
The FT reports
that Rubinstein points out that Palm had $592 million gross cash
position at the end of Q3. It would take almost all of that money to
get palm through until it can return to profitability. Analysts
believe that Palm won’t reach break-even until May of 2012 and by
that point it will have spent $534 million of its cash
reserves.
Palm is working on a new generation of handsets that
it hopes will fare better on the market than its current Pre and Pixi
devices. Rubinstein said, "[Palm is working] fast and furious on
new handsets." Analysts at RBC Capital markets told the FT that
Palm could receive bids as high as $2 to $3 billion considering it
has a market cap of $820 million.
“We do believe we have a moral responsibility to keep porn off the iPhone.” -- Steve Jobs
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