• On CHOW: What is soy lecithin?
June 2, 2009 7:05 AM PDT

EMC, NetApp compete to buy Data Domain

by Larry Dignan
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments

This was originally posted on ZDNet's Between the Lines.

EMC swooped in Monday with a $1.8 billion, or $30 a share, offer for Data Domain.

The rub: rival NetApp already had a plan to buy the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company for $1.5 billion, or $25 a share.

EMC said its all-cash offer is a 20 percent premium over NetApp's stock-and-cash offer on May 20.

Simply put, EMC wants to acquire Data Domain in order to thwart NetApp's offer--or at the very least make the acquisition more expensive. Joe Tucci, EMC's chief executive, said his company's offer is a "superior proposal" and a "win-win."

He added that the acquisition will strengthen EMC's position in the "next-generation disk-based backup and archive market."

Data Domain offers "deduplication storage appliances for disk-based backup, archiving, and network-based disaster recovery," according to its profile on Yahoo Finance.

On a conference call, Tucci said the Data Domain offer is about driving growth. "We had our eye on Data Domain, but obviously someone got there first," he said. He added that the growth profile of the combined companies makes the higher price worth it and that the combination of three products--EMC's DL4000 and Avamar and Data Domain--will be a $1 billion business.

Certainly, Data Domain shareholders were happy about the EMC offer:

Larry Dignan is editor in chief of ZDNet and editorial director of CNET's TechRepublic. He has covered the technology and financial-services industries since 1995.
Recent posts from Business Tech
Snapdragon chip powers itself into Nexus One
Intel's 'Turbo Boost' Core i5 comes to HP laptops
Disney opening 'magical' Times Square store
Opera browser company gets new CEO
Forrester: 5 keys for application development in 2010
Firefox development dilemma: Tweak or overhaul?
Zimbra buy to raise VMware's cloud ante
Big hurdles for rumored Nvidia x86 technology
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by Jcooper9 June 2, 2009 7:29 AM PDT
Good to see healthy competition among rivaling companies... this is what makes capitalism go!
Reply to this comment
by bj1126 June 2, 2009 10:21 AM PDT
The winner of this bidding war will have a big advantage.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Five New Year's resolutions for Google

Stakes are high as Google attempts to maintain one of the Internet's greatest cash machines while pushing into new and risky markets.
• Android event set for Jan. 5

For eBay sellers, a holiday hamster hangover

The gift frenzy over Zhu Zhu Pets leaves some power sellers feeling like they've just run a marathon--but the steep price tags lead to some impressive profits.

About Business Tech

Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Business Tech topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right