Report: IBM to Pay $7 Billion for Sun
Over the last couple of weeks, talk of Sun has centered around who the company is selling itself to, and for how much. While IBM is more than likely the answer to the first question, today brings a tentative answer to that second question.
Rumors that IBM was set to acquire Sun were what kicked this whole thing off in the first place. After that, there was reports that Sun was shopped around Silicon Valley before arriving at IBM’s doorstep. Then there was news that Sun was realigning itself and letting go a ton of employees, leading a lot of folk to believe it was trimming itself of any fat in order to appear more appealing to potential buyers.
The New York Times today reports that IBM is set to fork out 7 billion for its longtime rival. According to the NYT, which cites people familiar with the discussions (and not authorized to speak publicly, oops), IBM is offering $9.50 a share, down from a bid of $10 a share. Sources said the new agreement would restrict IBM’s ability to walk away from the deal.
Shares of IBM rose more than 3 percent on Thursday, to $100.82, and Sun’s shares rose more than 2 percent, to $8.21.
- IBM ,
- Sun ,
- Acquisition
- Microsoft Watching OEM Bloatware for Windows 7
- QOTD: Did You Ever Fry Your PC by Overclocking?
- MSI Launches AMD Turion X2 GX733 Gaming Notebook
- ArcSoft Claims HD From SD With Nvidia CUDA
- GeForce GTX 275, Radeon HD 4890 Now Available
- FileFront Acquired by Founders, Staying Online
- Nvidia Toots Ion Horn, Release Still On Track
- iPod Shuffle Sales Surge 50 Percent, But Why?
- Palm Gets its Mojo Working on the Pre
- QOTD: Do You Use Linux/BSD With a GUI?
- Texas Plans Ban of Vista From Government PCs
- Time Warner Unveils 40 GB Bandwidth Cap
- IBM, Sun Acquisition Deal Collapses
- AMD Restructuring Costs Revealed
- New Microsoft Ad Says Being Sexy Isn't Everything
- Microsoft: HP Gets Another Year of XP
- Dell Netbook Roadmap Leaked
- T-Mobile to Use Android on Tablet PC, Home Phone





Then who owns the moon?
Google unless Rolling Rock get there first