NetApp retreats from Data Domain bidding war

Vendor terminates merger agreement with Data Domain as a result of EMC’s unsolicited higher offer

By Kayleigh Bateman

09 Jul 2009

Be the first to comment

  • Digg
  • Tweet
two knights on horseback jousting
NetApp felt continuing in an expensive bidding war would diminish the deal’s strategic and financial benefits

NetApp has terminated its merger agreement with Data Domain, clearing the path for EMC to snap up the deduplication company.

The virtualisation vendor announced today that it will not revise its proposal to acquire Data Domain in the wake of EMC’s higher unsolicited offer. As a result NetApp has received a $57m (£35m) break-up fee from Data Domain.

Earlier this week EMC upped its bid to $2.1bn, moving ahead of NetApp’s $1.9bn offer made last month.

Further reading

EMC also stressed it could close the transaction within two weeks, almost a month faster than NetApp.

Dan Warmenhoven, NetApp’s chief executive, said: “While NetApp’s acquisition of Data Domain would have produced benefits for customers and employees and complemented NetApp’s existing growth trajectory, we remain highly confident in our already compelling strategic plan, market opportunities and competitive strengths.

“NetApp applies a disciplined approach to acquisitions, one focused intently on creating long-term value for our stockholders. We therefore cannot justify engaging in an increasingly expensive and dilutive bidding war that would diminish the deal’s strategic and financial benefits.”

NetApp first showed interest in Data Domain in May with an opening offer of $1.5bn to buy all of the outstanding shares of Data Domain common stock for $25 per share in cash and stock.

Warmenhoven concluded: “NetApp has established leadership positions in virtualised infrastructure, storage efficiency and unified storage, even in these difficult economic times, by helping customers meet their business objectives with less physical storage while reducing costs.

“That commitment will not change. We look forward to continuing to build on our foundation of innovation and customer service, and to continuing to execute our successful growth strategy.”

display:none
Loading
We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Will Apple's attitude to the channel change in 2012?

33%

20%

46%

1%

CRN Partner Connect 2012

CRN Partner Connect logo

CRN's premier networking event is back on 17 May at the Ricoh Arena

Date: Thu 17 May 2012

CRN Fight Night 2012

One of the fights from CRN Fight Night 2010

Channel fighters preparing to square up once more on 24 May

Date: Thu 24 May 2012

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel

fragment image

The mobile enterprise: Secure the data, not the device

The proliferation of endpoint devices within the enterprise has highlighted the shortcomings of one of the traditional approaches to data security

fragment image

Measuring the ROI of Google Apps

This Forrester report compares the costs and benefits of legacy email and productivity software with Google Apps


Dave the dealer blog

Dave the dealer

Clocking off

Dave discovers that rozzers are seemingly living in the technology dark ages

View from the channel

Views from the Channel

Departing CEO has done Dixons a service

Mark Needham, founder of distributor Widget, argues that John Browett leaves for Apple with Dixons in better shape than when he arrived

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.