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Lenovo takes over X86 server business from IBM

rott

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Good move. :)

Excellent News Cirr!!!!!!

Lenovo takes over X86 server business from IBM

Lenovo Group, the world's biggest personal computer maker, has finished the acquisition of the X86 server hardware and related maintenance services business from IBM, Lenovo said late Thursday.

In a statement filed to the Hong Kong stock exchange, the Beijing-based PC maker said it paid 1.847 billion U.S. dollars in cash and allotted 182 million Lenovo shares to IBM for the takeover.

Within one year from Oct. 1, IBM is restricted from offering, selling, transferring or otherwise disposing of the 182 million shares, according to the statement.

With the acquisition, Lenovo has become the world's third largest manufacturer of X86 servers.

The new business would further enhance Lenovo's competitiveness in enterprise equipments and services, said Yang Yuanqing, Lenovo board chairman and CEO.

Lenovo share prices opened 0.5 percent lower to 11.5 HK dollars (about 1.48 U.S. dollars) on Friday in Hong Kong.
 
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OKay ... IBM sold laptop and server to China Lenovo, what they left now ?
 
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Its time for some indian company to acquire the IBM's IT business as well...
Afterall most of their employee base is in india...

Tell that to some of the Indian IT companies and we will see if that will actually happen. Right now Lenovo is making headline :)
 
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Tell that to some of the Indian IT companies and we will see if that will actually happen. Right now Lenovo is making headline :)
Right now indian IT companies are doing better than the world...We dont need your certificate...
And what headline are you talking???
 
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Right now indian IT companies are doing better than the world...We dont need your certificate...
And what headline are you talking???

Better than the world? What's that?

You don't know Lenovo making headline? Then why are you even answering on this thread?
 
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show me sources that indian IT is the best in the world?

Right now indian IT companies are doing better than the world...We dont need your certificate...
And what headline are you talking???

Show me reliable sources of your outrageous claim?
 
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Two great deals for Lenovo in as many weeks。Cheers!:enjoy:

Staff and wire report

5:29 p.m. CST, January 29, 2014

Motorola Mobility, the Libertyville-based cell phone business with a longtime Chicago pedigree, will have Chinese ownership, under a deal announced Wednesday afternoon.

Google, which owns Motorola Mobility, said it will sell the smartphone business to Lenovo for $2.91 billion. It is China's largest-ever tech deal and Lenovo's second major buy on U.S. soil in as many weeks.

In this deal, Lenovo, which acquired IBM’s PC business in 2005, will get the Motorola brand and products, including the Moto X and Moto G.

Google will maintain ownership of the vast majority of the Motorola Mobility patent portfolio. But as part of the deal, Lenovo will receive a license for the portfolio of patents and other intellectual property.

“The acquisition of such an iconic brand, innovative product portfolio and incredibly talented global team will immediately make Lenovo a strong global competitor in smartphones,” Yang Yuanqing, Lenovo’s chairman and CEO, said in a statement. “We are confident that we can bring together the best of both companies to deliver products customers will love and a strong, growing business.”

The deal ends Google's short-lived foray into making consumer mobile devices and marks a pullback from its largest-ever acquisition. Google paid $12.5 billion for Motorola in 2012:hitwall::lol:. Under this deal the search giant will keep the majority of Motorola's mobile patents, considered its prize assets.

Shares in Google climbed 2.2 percent to about $1,131 in after-hours trading. Reuters reported the deal earlier on Wednesday, citing sources familiar with the deal.

The purchase will give Lenovo a beach-head to compete against Apple and Samsung Electronics as well as increasingly aggressive Chinese smartphone makers in the highly lucrative U.S. arena.

In 2005, Lenovo muscled its way into what was then the world's largest PC market by buying IBM's personal computer division. It has powered its way up the rankings of the global smartphone industry primarily through sales on its home turf but has considered a U.S. foray of late.

“Using Motorola, just as Lenovo used the IBM ThinkPad brand, to gain quick credibility and access to desirable markets and build critical mass makes a lot of sense,” said Forrester Research analyst Frank Gillett.

“But Motorola has not been shooting the lights out with designs or sales volumes in smartphones. So the value is simply in brand recognition to achieve market recognition faster - and to expand the design and marketing team with talent experienced at U.S. and Western markets.”

The deal is subject to approval by both U.S. and Chinese authorities.

Chinese companies faced the most scrutiny over their U.S. acquisitions in 2012, according to a report issued in December by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. Analysts say political issues could cloud the deal, especially with Lenovo trying to seal the IBM deal at the same time.

In the deal for the Motorola handset business, Lenovo will pay $660 million in cash, $750 million in Lenovo ordinary shares, and another $1.5 billion in the form of a three-year promissory note, Lenovo and Google said in a joint statement.

RISE OF THE CHINESE

In two years, China's three biggest handset makers - Huawei , ZTE Corp and Lenovo - have vaulted into the top ranks of global smartphone charts, helped in part by their huge domestic market and spurring talk of a new force in the smartphone wars.

Huawei declined to comment on the deal on Wednesday.

In the United States, the Chinese companies continue to grapple with low brand awareness, perceptions of inferior quality and even security concerns. In the third quarter of last year, ZTE and Huawei accounted for 5.7 percent and 3 percent of all phones sold in the United States, respectively, trailing Apple's 36.2 percent and Samsung's 32.5 percent, according to research house IDC.

Lenovo had negligible market share.

Globally, however, Lenovo ranked fifth in 2013 with a 4.5 percent market share, according to IDC. That's up from 3.3 percent in 2012 and virtually nil a couple years before that.

On the Google front, the Internet company has struggled to turn around loss-making Motorola. Now it's willing to step back from the hardware arena and throw its weight behind handset makers that propagate its Android software, Kantar analyst Carolina Milanesi said.

“It all points to Google thinking in the short run that they're better off betting on Samsung and keeping them close,” Milanesi said. “And of course now they're enabling a second strong runner (Lenovo) in the Android ecosystem.”

Analysts had seen Google's Motorola acquisition as primarily a way to secure the company's trove of patents amid the technology sector's increasing legal battles.

Many industry observers were surprised that Google did not immediately sell the hardware division after the deal closed, choosing instead to operate Motorola a separate company.

It did sell Motorola's cable television set-top box business to Arris Group Inc for $2.35 billion at the end of 2012.

Motorola Mobility's planned move to the Merchandise Mart in Chicago from its longtime headquarters in Libertyville, first announced in the summer of 2012, is expected to go forward.

Copyright © 2014, Reuters

Motorola cell phone unit to be bought by China's Lenovo - chicagotribune.com
 
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I'd rather Lenovo do organic growth rather than M&A.

It's cheap(Google paid 12.5 billion USD for the same biz less some patents in 2012)。

And selling under the MOTO brand will help Lenovo win US market share。
 
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