HCL Tech to buy some IBM software assets for $1.8 bn; experts question deal

HCL said the acquisition will give it scale in areas such as retail, financial services and transportation

Reuters 

Indian software services firm agreed to buy some software assets from International Business Machines Corp for $1.80 billion to help it compete better with bigger rivals such as and Ltd.

HCL shares fell as much as 7.7 per cent to their lowest in five months.

Some analysts said the deal did not make sense for HCL in the long term because it already has a partnership with and the benefits from the acquisition did not justify the price.

The acquisition, if completed, will be the largest-ever acquisition by an Indian technology company, according to Refinitiv data.

The deal will allow to further slim down its legacy businesses as it focuses on cloud computing. The US company has been hurt by slowing software sales and wavering demand for mainframe servers, making a turnaround difficult.

will divest seven of its products, including its secure-device management product BigFix, marketing automation software Unica and workstream collaboration product Connections.

HCL said the acquisition will give it scale in areas such as retail, financial services and transportation. It will add about $650 million in revenue on a run-rate basis in the second year after closing and increase cash earnings by about 15 per cent.

"I don't think it will help HCL on a long term basis ... this deal is a negative from HCL's standpoint," said Sudheer Guntupalli, a technology sector analyst with Ambit Capital in Mumbai.

"They already have IT partnerships for five of the seven products in the deal. So there would hardly be any incremental benefits on a qualitative basis," he said, adding that it did not make sense for HCL to rely so heavily on a single vendor's software when rivals have remained technology agnostic.

HCL, which has a market value of nearly $20 billion, recorded revenue of Rs 505.69 billion ($7.16 billion) last fiscal year. Rival TCS, the largest listed company in India, earned Rs 1.23 trillion in revenue last year and recorded revenue of Rs 705.22 billion.

HCL's stock fell as much as 7.7 per cent to Rs 934.45 on Friday, their lowest since July 6.

The transaction is expected to close by mid-2019.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Read our full coverage on HCL Technologies
First Published: Fri, December 07 2018. 05:23 IST