Icahn seeks court appraisal of $24.4-B Dell deal
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Billionaire investor Carl Icahn will ask a judge to assess the fairness of a proposed $24.4 billion acquisition of struggling personal computer maker Dell in his latest attempt to wrangle a higher price from a group of buyers that includes company CEO Michael Dell.
The legal move outlined Wednesday may end up being one of the last gasps in Icahn’s crusade to prove that Michael Dell and other investors led by Silver Lake Partners are trying to snap up the world’s third largest PC maker at a steep discount to its long-term value.
Icahn has backed up his belief by accumulating a nearly nine percent stake in Dell Inc. in hopes that he could flush out a deal that would be worth more than the $13.65 per share that Michael Dell and Silver Lake have agreed to pay for a Round Rock, Texas company that has fallen on hard times as more consumers and companies buy smartphones and tablets instead of laptop and desktop machines.
Michael Dell is betting that he will be able to revive the company that he founded in 1984 by cutting costs, overhauling the sales force and diversifying into more profitable technology niches, such as business software, data storage and analysis and consulting services. The changes are likely to lower Dell’s earnings, the main reason that Michael Dell wants to engineer the turnaround away from the financial pressures of Wall Street.
If the current bid is accepted, Dell would become a privately held company for the first time in 25 years.
Dell’s shareholders will get their chance to accept or rebuff the offer at a July 18 meeting. The bid must be backed by slightly more than 42 percent of Dell’s outstanding stock because Michael Dell’s nearly 16-percent stake in the company is being excluded from the count.
Before next week’s meeting, Icahn is urging the rest of Dell’s shareholders to join him in asking a court in Delaware, where Dell is incorporated, to determine whether Dell is worth more than $13.65 per share. Shareholders who pursue a court appraisal also will have to oppose the deal with Michael Dell.
In his letter, Icahn depicts the appraisal option as a “have your cake and eat it too†option because shareholders will still have the chance to change their minds and accept the $13.65 per share at a later date. Demanding an appraisal could be used as a bargaining chip, Icahn reasons, because Dell and Silver Lake might be willing to pay the dissident shareholders a slightly higher price to rid themselves of a legal headache.
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