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U.S. security panel delays Broadcom-Qualcomm merger showdown

Reuters 

By Rai

(Reuters) - A U. S. national security panel on Sunday ordered to put off its March 6 annual shareholder meeting by a month, delaying a long awaited showdown in the company's attempt to fend off a takeover by Singapore-based

The order adds to signs that Broadcom's promise to move its official base back to the before it completes the proposed $117 billion takeover may not be enough for U. S. officials at a time when international trade tensions are rising.

had reported last week that the panel, which can stop mergers that could harm U. S. security, had begun looking at Broadcom's bid, after pressure from politicians including senior Republican Senator

Separately, Broadcom said on Monday that the decision by CFIUS was the result of secret moves made by Qualcomm on Jan. 29 to encourage an investigation into the offer, which Qualcomm's board has said significantly undervalues the company.

The Committee asked Qualcomm to postpone the annual meeting and election of directors by 30 days.

"This measure will afford CFIUS the ability to investigate fully Broadcom's proposed acquisition of Qualcomm," the

said in a statement.

Before Broadcom disclosed its buyout offer for Qualcomm in November, himself announced Broadcom's plan to shift its headquarters back to the after a meeting with

Trump praised the move at the time, calling Broadcom "one of the really great, great companies."

Broadcom said on Monday it is run by a board and senior management team consisting almost entirely of Americans and is largely owned by the same U. S. institutional investors that own Qualcomm.

"Broadcom continues to pursue the redomiciliation process as expeditiously as possible," Broadcom said. "Upon completion of the redomiciliation, Broadcom's proposed acquisition of Qualcomm will not be a CFIUS covered transaction."

EXCUSE

Qualcomm, which has told shareholders it is open to the merger at the right price and terms, said last week it had no intention of delaying the annual shareholder meeting.

"Qualcomm now has their excuse to postpone their critical vote, giving them some breathing room to work on NXPI, attempt to make progress on their Apple licensing issues, and attempt to build a stronger case for shareholders," said

Qualcomm is in a legal battle with over licencing and allegations that it has not delivered on promised rebates - seen by analysts as an effort by Apple to undermine Qualcomm's strong position in mobile chips.

Last month Qualcomm also unveiled a sweetened $44 billion agreement to buy to expand its presence in and build its defense against Broadcom's hostile bid.

Broadcom, whose six nominees for Qualcomm's board are up for a vote at the shareholder meeting, said on Monday Qualcomm had not disclosed any approach to CFIUS in meetings between the two sides over the past month.

"This can only be seen as an intentional lack of disclosure - both to Broadcom and to its own stockholders," the Singapore-based chipmaker said in a statement.

Qualcomm and Broadcom were not immediately available for comment.

Qualcomm's shares fell 2 percent in trading before the bell. Broadcom shares were untraded.

(Reporting by and in Bengaluru; Editing by and Patrick Graham)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 05 2018. 19:18 IST
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