Oracle turns up the heat on BEA takeover

Database maker sets Sunday deadline for BEA to accept bid

Tom Sanders in California

Oracle has set a deadline of Sunday October 28 for BEA to accept its acquisition bid or put it before a shareholder vote.

Oracle on 15 October offered to pay $17 per share – about $6.7bn – for the middleware vendor. BEA turned down the offer, arguing that the company was worth substantially more.

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In his latest communication, Oracle president Charles Philips said that the company would not raise its offer.

"Oracle urges the BEA board of directors to let BEA's shareholders decide: sign an acquisition agreement with Oracle and allow the shareholders to vote. Oracle believes that our $17 per share price is generous and there are no offers for BEA above $17 per share," Phillips said.

The offer marks a 21 per cent premium to BEA's closing price prior to the bid. News of the planned acquisition, however, caused BEA stock to jump to nearly $19. Oracle's letter indicating a refusal to raise its offer reversed the tide on BEA's stock price. Shares in the middleware vendor are currently trading at around $18.

BEA president William Klein repeated his objection to the proposed price.

"If Oracle is genuinely interested in acquiring BEA, you are fully capable of proposing a reasonable price to the BEA board or taking any offer you wish directly to BEA shareholders," Klein wrote in response to Philips' latest letter.

Anne Thomas Manes, a vice president and research director with analyst firm the Burton Group, told vnunet.com that she believed that the acquisition will go through.

"I expect Oracle to come back with a slightly higher bid, but it's going to happen," Manes said.

BEA has repeatedly been the subject of acquisition rumours, Manes pointed out, prompting customers to delay purchases or opt for a vendor that they deem more viable.

"BEA's viability has been tenuous for a couple of years now. That's not good for BEA and not good for BEA customers."

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