Blackstone Group LP has ended its pursuit of Dell Inc, easing the way for founder Michael Dell and his private equity partner Silver Lake to go ahead with a $24.4 billion deal to acquire the world's No 3 PC maker. New York-based Blackstone pulled out just a month after it launched a challenge to the billionaire's attempt to take Dell private. Dell's shares fell 2.2 percent in pre-market trading on Friday.
In a letter published by a Dell board committee on Friday, Blackstone cited an unprecedented 14 percent drop in industry PC sales in the first quarter of 2013 and a lower earnings forecast by Dell among the reasons for its withdrawal. "Since our bid submission, we learned that the company revised its operating income projections for the current year to $3.0 billion from $3.7 billion," Blackstone's bidding group wrote in the letter.
The letter was published by Dell's special board committee, which is handling all buyout-related matters. Three people familiar with the matter had previously told Reuters about the withdrawal. Blackstone and activist investor Carl Icahn, who has taken a significant stake in the company and opposes Michael Dell's buyout, had made preliminary offers to the company challenging the deal with Silver Lake.
Icahn's chances of a successful rival offer are viewed by analysts and investors as slimmer than Blackstone's, yet the deal with Silver Lake still faces significant opposition from some Dell shareholders, including South-eastern Asset Management, the activist investor that owns 8.4 percent of the company. Silver Lake declined to comment. Icahn could not immediately be reached for comment.
Icahn and Blackstone each offered alternatives that would keep part of the company public. Icahn has proposed paying $15 per share for 58 percent of Dell, while Blackstone had indicated it could pay more than $14.25 per share for the whole of Dell. Both deal structures involve saddling the company with a good deal of debt and keeping it on public markets. Silver Lake's $13.65 per share all-cash offer would see Dell go private.
Dell said on Tuesday that Icahn had agreed not to raise his stake in the company to more than 10 percent, and that he could team up with other shareholders on a potential bid for the personal computer maker. On the same day, Icahn said in a brief statement that his latest agreement with Dell did not prevent him from embarking on a proxy fight.
Dell was regarded as a model of innovation as recently as the early 2000s but has struggled to make up for a declining share of the global PC market. The company is now trying to transform itself into a provider of enterprise computing services, reducing its reliance on PC sales. The Financial Times reported Blackstone had pulled out of negotiations with Dell earlier on Thursday.
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