Oracle's $6.7 Billion Bid for BEA Turned Down 61
andy1307 writes to tell us that according to the Mercury News, Oracle has made an unsolicited bid to buy BEA Systems for about $6.7 billion. BEA confirmed that it rejected the $17 a share bid as too low. "BEA told Phillips that its board of directors believes BEA 'is worth substantially more to Oracle, to others and, importantly, to our shareholders than the price indicated in your letter.' Oracle's aggressive bid may be an attempt to pre-empt an acquisition by others, Finley said. Those named in the past as potential suitors include IBM, the German software company SAP AG and Hewlett-Packard. Trip Chowdhry of Global Equity Research said he expects a counterbid from SAP, which he said needs BEA to survive. 'If they don't get BEA, probably in two years SAP will be on the block to sell itself,' Chowdhry predicted. Oracle needs to keep BEA out of competitors' hands, he said. Chowdhry said the offer currently 'is not right. Probably at $21 the deal will get done.'"
Bea Arthur = Win (Score:3, Funny)
I agree. I mean, Bea was a total powerhouse in Golden Girls.
Misparsed... (Score:5, Funny)
Oracle buy one of the world's major munitions manufacturers... well, do you want to argue about which is the best database with people who manufacture JSFs and Typhoons? No? Me neither...
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They should have taken it (Score:5, Interesting)
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Oracle got a neat offering for implementing SOA, but some parts still need some serious improvement. Its basically missing some aspects of the top layers in a SOA, like proper support for BPM (no, ARIS wont wor
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the stack traces JRockit produces are formatted differently from those of Sun's JVM (which prevents my IDE from turning them into clickable hotlinks that take me to the lines of offending code). FSM knows why they made them different.
Since about two years back our stack traces look identical to SUN's. I'm at home right now and can't give you a specific release for that change. The difference was that old versions of JRockit used to show full method signatures rather tha
Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the space Oracle plays in. By buying BEA they get a bunch more of this kind of customer.
To them you can bet it is worth 6.7 billion.
Step 2 is the clever bit (Score:1)
2) Don't tell them. <=== clever bit!
3) ????
4) Profit!!!!!
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There are two splits in your graphs, so the current price makes the shares worth a lot more than they were in the late 90's.
Regarding the multi-year horizon, let's compare BEAS to its competitors over the last 5 years [yahoo.com]... the value is clearly there.
As for shutting up & taking the money... the board is doing *exactly* what it's paid to do, which is get the bes
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Also, it makes sense to take them before anyone else does, so they can integrate BEA WebLogic into it's application server and therefore lock other companies out of gaini
Oracle will buy BEA (Score:2)
What happens to Oracle's OAS team and product if this happens? OAS has been soundly whipped by BEA in the marketplace and they are basically both the same thing.
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OAS has not really any market penetration and ISVs typically support WSA or WLS. The new think for WLS would be that Oracle can "force" customers to adopt it. Most customers use Oracle DBs anyway and the WLS app server could become a necessary part of it. Oracle already tried this with OAS, just that it did work due to the lacking ISV support. IBM uses a similar schema with WSA.
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No-brainer (Score:4, Interesting)
SAP needs to buy BEA to survive? (Score:2)
Does this mean companies need to become an international monopoly in order to survive? My mind boggles at all the corporate takeovers, M&As etc.
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So if Oracle buys BEA, does that set the scene for Oracle/BEA to buy SAP in two year's time? Does this mean companies need to become an international monopoly in order to survive?
Because something that was a mere buzzword for a long time finally shows some effect on the market: SOA.
There are basically three big companies that started marketing SOA and laying the foundation with some standards: Microsoft, IBM and BEA. And they had good reasons for that. Currently "enterprise software" is graced with vendor-lockins that make Microsoft look like innocent angels.
To do anything with SAP you need a SAP consultant that will milk you until you are dry like dust. Same for ECM systems. SOA
It was reported as a done deal (Score:3, Insightful)
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I noticed this too, but it did seem as if the deal would be solid.
I really don't know much about BEA outside of its Wikipedia entry, but I'm sure that since their solutions are database oriented (correct me if I'm wrong, please), having (what I would suppose would be) full access to Oracle's codebase is extremely advantageous.
With the way Oracle has been performing lately on the stock market, I'm sure BEA will regret not having taken this offer. If anything, their rejection may actually harm them in the
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BEA will get a better price... it's how the game is played. And if it somehow remains independent, it slaps egg on Larry's face.
BEA's stuff (like any business infrastructure) relies databases a lot, but the company isn't very database-oriented. It's a
BEA better not wait too long (Score:2)
Get real (Score:2, Insightful)
Sorry folks, we speak here about enterprise computing. Nobody really cares for open source until it is a proven product. And JBoss is not in this league. If you run several million transactions per day and each transaction makes you one EUR or more, there is nothing open source can give you:
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Guess that is one way to nuke competition... (Score:2)
BEA makes perfect sense (Score:1)
BEA better take it while they can... (Score:2, Interesting)
When Larry snagged PeopleSoft, they hurt BEA very badly - there are lots of PeopleSoft instances out there running under Web
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I once talked to some BEA execs at the BEA offices as a member of the trade press, maybe around 2001. The BEA folks in the ro
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As for packaged deals, yeah, it makes competition hard, but we've whupped Oracle in competitive shoot outs on the product merits more often then not.
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Dude - wake-up and smell the acquisitions. You competed and won against Oracle in a different marketplace - when budgets were high, best-of-breed made sense and having PeopleSoft ERP + Oracle DBMS + BEA middleware was the smart play. Fast forward to Peoplesoft v9+ and beyond that to Oracle Fusion. Oracle has already said that PS will be certified on Oracle middleware - do you really think Oracle would con
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I wasn't considering vapourware as part of this discussion. No doubt you're correct that Oracle wouldn't want to be dependent on our software.
My budgets are tighter than ever before, and I'm tired of the constant need to figure out which vendor is causing me today's heartburn. I want
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Why not Red Hat? (Score:2, Insightful)
A BEA employee's perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
Basically, BEA wants to stay indepdenent, because it lets us do interesting things if we keep shareholders happy. And, by and large, we had been doing just that for the past 3 years, until licenses started to fall earlier this year. Wall Street forces a quarter by quarter mentality that's very hard to meet in a midsized company, in my opinion, given that the nature of "infrastructure software" involves longer sales cycles than when the dot-com bubble kept the "J2EE app server" purchase orders flowing in.
For those that suggest BEA's WebLogic is somehow commoditized and is the source of all of our woes, please understand a few things:
- BEA sells a *lot* more than an app server. Both Tuxedo and WebLogic Server have not been a sales focus for years at BEA, at least in North America -- Tux is still growing in Asia. The core products are still a cash cow, so we invest most of our R&D into it, but it doesn't account for the growth we've had since 2002. Most of that has been from Portal, Integration, and the new AquaLogic stuff.
- BEA contributes a lot to Java open source -- it's on the Eclipse board, it runs two Apache projects, is a major contributer and partner with Interface21 (the Spring guys), etc.
- Open source has never been BEA's biggest competitor. IBM and Oracle are. Really. The reason is that a major portion of BEA's sales focus is on enterprise license deals in the $million$ range. In the smaller deals, that's more likely where you see
- BEA's *new* license growth had fallen recently, but maintenance and overall revenue continues to rise. That means that, the *rate* in which our middleware is being acquired is slowing for us as of late, not that people have somehow stopped buying our stuff. So, yep, we could be doing a better job improving & selling what we have with AquaLogic and WebLogic, but it's not doom and gloom times here. Maybe it will be better under another company, I donno. Part of the problem is that pure "middleware" in general is a hard sell, as companies like TIBCO are also feeling right now -- SOA was the latest trend, with some reasonable enthusiasm and growth associated with it, but the real fortune was made in the peak of the dot-com boom, and it's hard to replicate that sort of hype. Oracle sells middleware along side applications, databases, security suites, etc., so it's not quite as hard to sell the business on the benefits.
- I have no idea what the article is talking about with regards to SAP. I think NetWeaver is a crap pile, but that doesn't mean they're dead if they don't buy us. They could go open source, or improve it.... People stick with SAP because they're locked in, not because NetWeaver is supposed to be better.
- Even if this deal doesn't go through, BEA is viable enough to stay independent. It has over $1B in the bank, it generates high free cash flow, and if we could get this stock options review over & done with, we could actually have some good information for the Street to price us properly. The question really is about the stock price -- whether the shareholders think we can raise it on our own, or someone else can do a better job of it.
Anyway, I've been pretty happy with the company for the past 3 years. Regardless of what happens, it's exciting times.
A Developers Perspective (Score:3, Insightful)
I've been in the Java "Enterprise" domain for nearly ten years now. I first used BEA's weblogics back in 1999 (not even sure if it was owned by BEA yet). It was a good product, respected standards, and seemed to be development friendly. I considered it the best servlet engine at the time.
A couple of years ago I did a contract gig for a fortune 500 company that wanted to create corporate internal and external web portals. The company purchased the entire BEA middleware stack from Weblogics to Portal to
An integration architect's perspective (Score:3, Interesting)
Typically, customers look for business solutions. They look for standardized packages for their business domain. This is were SAP is getting stronger. (BTW, we had to tell SAP that we did not need middleware from their side...)
The whole SOA trend goes in this direction. To stop thinking about integration as technical plumbing but as connections with a business meaning. This is an arena
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Could you elaborate? I do Java development with Netweaver 2004s/7.0, and I'm interested in why you think it's a 'crap pile'. Really, I want to know. I've had a small amount of experience with BEA, and it was a long, long time ago, so I have no idea what the major differences are between them today.
SAP has created (or has purchased/modified) a very robust (and open) J2EE environment. It does have a few oddities (tedious develop/deploy/test cycle), but overall, I quite like
BEA? (Score:2)
BEA is a dinosaur (Score:1)
Oracle wins even if it loses (Score:1)
1) No one else steps up to bid, and Oracle ups its offer. Oracle wins BEA - the $17 offer was probably a low ball anyways.
2) BEA keeps refusing: Licenses fall because customers are unsure of the future. Oracle LOWERS its bid and the board forces a sale (as happened with PeopleSoft) or there are shareholder lawsuits because the shares fall below the $17 v