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Re: [新聞] IBM求售個人電腦部門
http://www.reuters.com/audi/news ... amp;storyID=6993937
直接看外電可以避免誤譯的情況
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - IBM (IBM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is reportedly in talks to sell its personal computer business in a deal that could be worth up to $2 billion and would cap a gradual withdrawal from the business it helped to pioneer in 1981.
IBM, now the No. 3 PC maker behind Dell Inc. (DELL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) and Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ.N: Quote, Profile, Research) , is likely to include all of its desktop, laptop and notebook computers in the sale, which could earn it between $1 billion and $2 billion, The New York Times reported on Friday, citing people close to the negotiations.
Hong Kong-based Lenovo Group Ltd. (0992.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) , China's top PC maker, and at least one other company are said to be in talks with International Business Machines Corp., the Times reported.
IBM declined to comment. "It's IBM's practice not to comment on rumor or speculation," company spokesman Ed Barbini said.
Officials of Lenovo in Hong Kong and Beijing could not be reached for comment.
IBM has exited the low-margin storage and memory chip businesses in recent years, while investing in what it sees as strategic growth areas like computer services and software.
Instead of focusing on individual computer users, IBM in recent years has returned its focus to the powerful machines known as servers that organizations use to run everything from basic Web sites to big-business or governmental operations. These computers range from PC-based servers to classic mainframes.
Gartner Inc., a leading research firm, earlier this week forecast that three of the top 10 personal computer makers would exit the market by 2007, citing slower growth rates and narrower profit margins. It did not name any companies.
"If IBM is exiting PCs, management is likely making a long-term call that PCs are commodities," Merrill Lynch analyst Steve Milunovich wrote in a note to clients.
Shares of IBM rose 1.4 percent to $97.08 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. Shares of IBM have surged 15 percent since the company reported third-quarter results in mid-October. They are up 4.5 percent on the year.
IBM MAY STILL KEEP A HAND IN PCs
Wall Street analysts, several of whom have called on IBM for years to divest its PC business, hailed the potential move. But some believe IBM may seek to keep its hand in the business, whether or not it hands off production to another company.
Several analysts argued that IBM should preserve its ability to sell IBM-branded PCs to corporate clients as a foot in the door to sell higher-value gear like servers and data storage.
"Big Blue may not elect to sell the entire business and could (instead) structure a creative deal in pieces or in terms of distribution," UBS analyst Ben Reitzes wrote to clients.
The IBM PC was first introduced in 1981. Its first portable computer debuted in 1984.
IBM's Thinkpad laptops are the leading brand of commercial notebook computers. IBM holds a 14 percent share of a market estimated to be worth $11 billion, IDC estimates.
IBM ranks a distant third behind Dell and HP in the desktop PC market -- a $16.8 billion market. In the late 1990s, IBM withdrew from the consumer PC market in the United States.
IBM, based in Armonk, New York, sold its PC production operations in the United States to contract manufacturer Sanmina-SCI (SANM.O: Quote, Profile, Research) two years ago.
It also relies for PC desktop and notebook production on contractors such as Solectron Corp. and Tawian's Wistron (3231.TW: Quote, Profile, Research) and Quanta Computer (2382.TW: Quote, Profile, Research) .
Since 1994, China's second-biggest domestic PC maker, Great Wall Technology Co. Ltd. (0074.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) , has operated a series of joint ventures with IBM in China to manufacture IBM desktops, storage and other products.
IBM and Great Wall operate a personal computer production joint venture in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen that employs some 4,000 people. A Great Wall spokesman in Shenzhen was not immediately available to comment.
Bloomberg News reported that IBM had hired Merrill Lynch & Co. (MER.N: Quote, Profile, Research) to find a buyer for its PC business, citing a person familiar with the situation. Neither IBM nor Merrill would comment on the report.
The possible deal with Lenovo, which controls more than a quarter of China's PC market, follows Chinese media reports three weeks ago that Lenovo was preparing to set up a joint venture with IBM.
Lenovo said in April that it would likely enter the international market through acquisitions, and that financing an acquisition "would not be a major problem."
© Reuters 2004. All Rights Reserved.
不過目前還是傳聞啦, 希望不要成真,要不真的要趁還未售出前先買一台小黑, |
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