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    Oracle, Sun Deal Strengthens Competition Against IBM, HP, Cisco

    Written by

    Nicholas Kolakowski
    Published April 20, 2009
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      Oracle‘s April 20 announcement that it plans to purchase Sun Microsystems, in a deal worth roughly $7.4 billion, or $9.50 a share, will create a multi-arena competitor to IBM and other IT giants such as Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Cisco Systems.

      IBM was reportedly in discussions to purchase Sun for $6.5 billion, potentially allowing Big Blue to swallow up even more market share in the enterprise server hardware and software areas, when that deal collapsed in early April.

      According to Reuters reports at the time, IBM even raised its offer to $9.50 a share, over $7 billion, before talks failed. Neither company confirmed publicly any cause for the collapse, nor that they were even in discussions over a possible acquisition.

      However, the language of the Oracle-Sun announcement led Charles King, an analyst with Pund-IT Research, to suggest that Sun found Oracle’s terms more agreeable.

      “One thing that was interesting in the announcement was that Sun regards this as a merger rather than an acquisition,” King said in an interview. “On one level, that’s simply word choice, but it also suggests that Sun is entering this deal with a level of autonomy that they might have felt was absent in acquisition talks with other folks.”

      “It’s politically correct speech,” King added, “but it implies that Sun is going into this deal as an equal partner as opposed to a company that’s down on its luck.”

      Sun had been struggling amidst a global recession and a contracting server and data center market, with losses of $209 million in the fourth quarter of 2008. This financial weakness also led analysts to conclude that Sun would have a relatively limited pool of suitors from which to choose.

      Oracle, on the other hand, enters today in a strong competitive position on a number of fronts. According to IDC, the company had 44.3 percent of the relational database management systems (RDBMS) market in 2007, the last full year for which the research firm has figures. By contrast, MySQL owned some 0.2 percent of the market. The top five players in that arena, controlling some 90 percent of the market share, were Oracle, IBM, Microsoft, Sybase and Teradata.

      On top of that, Oracle has spent much of 2009 already in an acquisition mood despite the recession, purchasing a number of companies including mValent, a group that produces configuration management solutions, and Relsys International, which develops drug safety and risk management solutions.

      Acquiring Sun will nonetheless give Oracle the opportunity to expand on its end-to-end offerings. With the deal in place, and expected to close at some point this summer, Oracle now owns Java and Solaris, both of which already provide the foundation for several key Oracle products.

      “Engineering the Oracle database and the Solaris operating system to work together enables us, for the first time, to deliver integrated computer systems, database to disk, optimized for high performance,” Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle, said during an April 20 conference call. He also suggested that the integration of the database and Solaris would translate into improved reliability, security and cost controls on the client side.

      A Sun acquisition lets Oracle head IBM off at the proverbial pass with regard to database middleware, a vital component of both company’s overall business strategy.

      “Of all the Sun partners who might have been threatened by an IBM-Sun deal, if Oracle wasn’t at the top of the list, they certainly were in the top two or three,” King said. “IBM’s DB2 database middleware is a large and serious competitor for Oracle; by buying Sun, Oracle can more effectively guard against Sun’s customers being ported over to DB2.”

      The acquisition will likely give Oracle advantages in the hardware arena.

      “We see Oracle competing more for mindshare in the hardware space,” Ray Wang, an analyst with Forrester, wrote in an e-mail, “putting it in front of IBM for end-to-end deals. With the Sun acquisition, that came has changed.

      “The deal puts Oracle on a continued path to acquiring deeper components of the enterprise computing stack,” Wang added. “While Java and Solaris may appear to be the crown jewels in the deal, the real significance is the entrustment of the other parts of the open-source stack with Oracle.”

      These “other parts” include MySQL, which despite its lack of market share compared with Microsoft and IBM is still a name as an open-source alternative. On top of that, Oracle gains access to Sun Microsystems Laboratories, with their pipeline of enterprise-solutions products.

      Nicholas Kolakowski
      Nicholas Kolakowski
      Nicholas Kolakowski is a staff editor at eWEEK, covering Microsoft and other companies in the enterprise space, as well as evolving technology such as tablet PCs. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Playboy, WebMD, AARP the Magazine, AutoWeek, Washington City Paper, Trader Monthly, and Private Air.

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