Dell has hit back at rival HP, just days after it made its own takeover offer for cloud storage vendor 3PAR.
Three days ago Hewlett-Packard tendered a $24 (£15.56) per-share or $1.5 billion (£973 million) offer to acquire enterprise storage maker 3PAR.
But Dell has raised the stakes by about $100 million (£65 million), upping its offer to $1.6 billion, (£1.03 billion) or $24.30 (£15.75) a share.
3PAR said its board of directors approved the proposal. 3PAR and Dell signed an amendment to their previously announced agreement of 16 August reflecting the new offer price and a revised termination fee of $72 million (£47 million).
3PAR, located in Fremont, California, and employer of about 600 people, originally made its reputation by delivering a scalable, dependable thin-provisioning feature. It is a hot storage property because its clustered, utility-type architecture is tailor-made for cloud systems that deliver software as a service, and cloud storage systems are in demand at this time.
HP already has a scale-out-type storage acquisition in iSCSI specialist Lefthand Networks, which it bought in October 2008 for $360 million (£233 million). The Lefthand acquisition mirrored the 2007 pickup of iSCSI storage maker EqualLogic by Dell.
Storage product choice is clearly behind this bidding war. Both HP and Dell already have among the world’s largest catalogues of storage hardware and software, but the high number of enterprises refreshing all or part of their data centers at this time is pushing system vendors to add more options in order to satisfy demand.
“We’re seeing increasing demand for a new class of storage,” Brad Anderson, senior vice president of Dell’s Enterprise Product Group, said during a recent conference call. “For businesses and models that provide storage as a utility, we think 3PAR is a fantastic addition to that lineup.”
HP Executive Vice President Dave Donatelli said on 23 August, “From my perspective, a 3PAR … is a company that has good technology but does not have the ability to bring it to market.”
HP can bring 3PAR’s wares to market directly, through channel partners or through the HP services group, Donatelli said.
3PAR’s stock was selling at just over $26 (£16.86) by midday 26 August, down about 2 percent on the day. Until the bidding war began with HP’s original offer, 3PAR’s stock had sold for under $10 (£6.48) for more than a year.
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