Market Updates

AMD Acquires ATI for $5.4 B

Elena
24 Jul, 2006
New York City

    Under terms of agreement AMD will pay $4.2 billion in cash and 57 million AMD shares to acquire all of ATI''s outstanding stock, according to a news release. The new offerings would broaden AMD''s package of products as it takes on Intel. ATI makes chipsets and graphics chips for PCs, as well as a host of semiconductors for consumer products.

[R]8:00AM Advanced Micro Devices agreed to pay $5.4 B for ATI Technologies.[/R]
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. ((AMD)) announced Monday morning it agreed to pay $5.4 billion for the acquisition of top graphics chip maker ATI Technologies Inc., as Intel Corp.'s biggest rival in the market for personal-computer microprocessors attempts to expand its product portfolio. Under terms of agreement AMD will pay $4.2 billion in cash and 57 million AMD shares to acquire all of ATI's outstanding stock, according to a news release. AMD will borrow $2.5 billion from Morgan Stanley to help fund the purchase. Based on AMD's closing share price of $18.21 on Friday, the deal valued ATI's shares at $20.47, a premium of almost 24% compared with ATI's Friday's closing price of $16.56 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. ATI shares surged more than 9% to $18.07 in pre-market trading.

AMD expects the deal to contribute modestly to earnings in 2007 and considerably to profit by 2008. The purchase is expected to save the combined company about $75 million by the end of 2007.

The new offerings would broaden AMD's package of products as it takes on Intel, the world''s biggest chip maker that has long supplied a wider portfolio. Ontario-based ATI makes chipsets and graphics chips for PCs, as well as a host of semiconductors for consumer products, such high definition TVs and cell phones. According to analysts, the acquisition of ATI ‘would make AMD a bigger player with a more diversified portfolio,’ and ‘would certainly put AMD on a more equal footing relative to Intel.’


[R]7:00AM Asian markets closed down as techs weighed.[/R]
Asian-Pacific benchmarks closed slightly lower as gains for automakers helped limit losses brought by the tech sector after the Nasdaq hit a 14-month low. The Nikkei lost 0.18% as signs of strengthening domestic economy and strong June production figures for automakers offset declines among technology stocks. Japan’s largest PC maker NEC Corp. dropped 2.08%, while the country’s biggest chip maker Toshiba slipped 1.55%. Steel stocks and industrials shares also showed weakness. Automotive shares advanced after Toyota Motor reported domestic production increase of 10.25, and Honda Motor posted 8.8% growth. Across the region, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 0.06%, with China’s Lenovo down 1.89% on Dell’s profit warning and modest weakness in the financial sector. South Korea’s Kospi dropped 0.6%, dragged by Samsung Electronics, down 1.5% and LG Electronics, down 0.56%. Stock markets in China, Taiwan, Thailand, and Australia also ended down.


European stocks recovered from last-week weakness to move higher at mid-day trading on stronger telecom shares and gains for consumer-electronics giant Philips Electronics. Retreating oil prices also provided support to sentiment. Vodafone Group climbed 2.7% after the company reported Q1 revenue growth of 9.2% and confirmed its outlook. Other telecommunication shares like BT Group, France Telecom, and Deutsche Telekom also advanced. Philips rose 3.9% on news that three private equity firms are bidding over $10 billion for its semiconductor unit. The German DAX 30 rose 0.9%, the French CAC 40 was up 0.7%, and London FTSE 100 surged 1%.

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