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    Home Database
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    Oracle Sweetens Its PeopleSoft Offer

    Written by

    John S. McCright
    Published June 18, 2003
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      Oracle Corp. raised the stakes in its bid to buy enterprise software rival PeopleSoft Inc. this morning by upping its offer by nearly 22 percent.

      Oracle, of Redwood Shores, Calif., announced that it will raise the price it is offering for PeopleSoft stock to $19.50 per share, up from $16 per share. The revised offer puts the value of the deal at about $6.3 billion.

      The new offer erases what many observers had said was one possible impediment to the deal—that the price was too low. The original offer price was slightly under the price that PeopleSoft shares were trading on the Nasdaq market. The updated price is a 29 percent premium on the PeopleSoft stock price prior to Oracles original cash offer, Oracle officials said.

      CEO Larry Ellison said in a statement that Oracle officials spoke to holders of a majority of PeopleSoft shares over the past few days and that they said they wanted more for the stock.

      “Oracle remains committed to acquiring PeopleSoft and will not be deterred by managements maneuvers to maintain control of a company they do not own,” Ellison said, in the statement.

      He also hoped to remove another roadblock to the deal, adding that Oracle would “fully support PeopleSoft customers and products for many years to come. Satisfying those customers is the key to the success of this acquisition.”

      Oracle will answer PeopleSofts lawsuit against the company, which was filed last Friday in a California court, with its own suit against PeopleSoft and against J.D Edwards & Co., a midmarket enterprise software developer that PeopleSoft is trying to acquire. The suit from PeopleSoft, of Pleasanton, Calif., alleged that Oracle was trying to undermine its business by launching the hostile takeover bid. PeopleSofts board of directors last week urged shareholders to reject Oracles tender offer and this week raised its own offer to buy Denver-based J.D. Edwards.

      The Oracle suit in Delaware courts charges the PeopleSoft board of breaching its fiduciary responsibility to shareholders and seeks to annul two things—PeopleSofts updated offer to buy J.D. Edwards and PeopleSofts “poison pill,” a corporate bylaw that would make the cost of a hostile takeover much more expensive.

      In a conference call with financial analysts this morning, Oracle Executive Vice President Chuck Phillips reiterated that Oracle would continue to support PeopleSoft applications, though he would not commit to any specific timeframe.

      “We are extending the support period for PeopleSoft products,” said Phillips. “Contrary to numerous reports in the press, we do not plan to eliminate support for PeopleSoft products, period.

      PeopleSoft customers will not be forced to migrate to Oracle applications, period.”

      PeopleSoft customers would receive a free license upgrade to like modules of Oracles applications if and when they elect to migrate, he said.

      Page Two

      Phillips said he believes that many PeopleSoft customers would migrate to Oracle E-business Suite “over the long haul,” although they would still be able to buy new PeopleSoft seats at least initially.

      “Our intention is for E-business Suite to be our go-forward,” he said. “Some customers may need additional seats of PeopleSoft. Well offer a limited capability for that, but we wont actively be pushing that.

      We havent come up with a timeframe yet; well see what makes sense when we talk to [PeopleSoft] customers.”

      The acquisition could create new opportunities for Oracle partners, Phillips said.

      “Weve already had a lot of our partners express interest in building migration practices. Given that well have access to PeopleSoft code and developers, migration tools should be much more robust, which means wed need less services if we build them right.”

      Oracle also intends to rely on outsourcing services to manage PeopleSoft applications while customers upgrade to Oracle applications, Phillips said.

      Phillips said Oracle would honor existing customer obligations for PeopleSofts consulting business post-acquisition.

      “Theres certainly no reason for PeopleSoft customers to feel like those projects wont get done,” he said.

      Many PeopleSoft customers arent swallowing Oracles rationale, however. In fact, members of the Distributors and Manufacturers User Group (DMUG), an independent organization of manufacturing companies, on Wednesday joined the chorus of voices in support of PeopleSoft by lending their scornful comments to a PeopleSoft ad.

      The ad features such PeopleSoft customers comments as one from Jim Bolte, vice president of information services at Toyota Motor Manufacturing North America, in which customers say that if they had to do it over again, theyd still choose PeopleSoft over Oracle. “One of the primary reasons we chose PeopleSoft over Oracle was because of PeopleSofts professionalism, integrity and customer satisfaction focus,” said Bolte, in the ad. “After an 8-year relationship, wed still make the same choice.”

      Beyond preferring one companys customer-relationship style over another, users see no gain from expensive migrations, said Bob Cerny, president of DMUG. “It depends on how many pieces or modules a company owns,” said Cerny, in Oakbrook, Ill. “If theyre only putting in HR, its less. But if its integrated with financials, distribution and manufacturing, its easily millions of dollars. What value would a company get out of it?”

      (Editors Note: This story has been updated since its original posting to include comments from Oracles Phillips and additional reporting by eWEEK Senior Writer Lisa Vaas.)

      John S. McCright
      John S. McCright

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