The former CEO of HP, Mark Hurd, is in negotiations with Oracle and could be about to join the company as a high-ranking executive, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Hurd resigned from his post with the technology giant in the face of sexual harassment issues. The paper reported “people familiar with the matter” explained there was no specific timeline in the process and talks were still ongoing.
Before being hired, Oracle’s board would have to agree to the decision, the paper reported.
In early August, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison sharply criticised the HP’s board of directors for firing in Hurd, accusing the group of “cowardly corporate political correctness.” In an email sent to The New York Times on 9 August, Ellison called the HP board’s move “the worst personnel decision since the idiots on the Apple board fired Steve Jobs many years ago. That decision nearly destroyed Apple and would have if Steve hadn’t come back and saved them.”
As of this year, Larry Ellison, a co-founder of Oracle Corporation, has served as Oracle’s CEO throughout its history. Specialising in database management systems the company also builds tools for database development and systems of middle-tier software, enterprise resource planning software (ERP), customer relationship management software (CRM) and supply chain management (SCM) software.
By 2007, Oracle had the third-largest software revenue, after Microsoft and IBM.
Following Hurd’s departure, the HP board appointed Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Cathie Lesjak, 51, as CEO on an interim basis.
Lesjak is a 24-year veteran of the company who has served as HP’s CFO and as a member of the company’s Executive Council since January 2007. Ezra Gottheil, senior analyst at Technology Business Research, said despite the controversy surrounding Hurd’s departure, the company remains in an excellent market position. “Under Hurd’s guidance, the company controlled costs through the recession, allowing it to maintain operating margins of at least 8 percent throughout three consecutive quarters (1Q09-3Q09) of revenues that decreased year-to-year,” Gottheil wrote. “These results were particularly impressive considering HP was digesting the $13.9 billion (£8.9 billion) acquisition of EDS, a merger that gives HP a strong services arm.”
HP recently triumphed over rival IT giant Dell in a bidding war for 3PAR, a storage company that specialises in handling data in massive amounts for large-scale IT systems. HP coughed up $2.35 billion (£1.5 billion) to acquire the company, which translates into a $33-per-share bid. Finalisation of the transaction, however, will be dependent upon the shareholders of each company, who will vote on the deal within the next few weeks.
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