SEATTLE/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp is playing defense with a $2 billion loan to help Dell Inc's founder buy back the world's No.3 PC maker as it seeks to shore up support for Windows and beat back the march of Google Inc's Android.
The investment in the landmark $24 billion buyout led by Michael Dell
marks the latest step in Microsoft's plan to gain more influence over
the hardware supply chain - a departure from the decades-old,
software-centric philosophy that helped it dominate the computing world
but is now increasingly under threat.
It is far from
clear, however, if this strategy will be successful, while the world's
largest software maker risks upsetting other computer producers.
"It doesn't mean
it's a bad move, but it's definitely defensive. Microsoft is realizing
it must be much more engaged in the hardware business than it used to
be, it needs to be making bets and forming relationships," said Andrew
Bartels, an analyst at Forrester Research.
The company that built its fortune on making
high-priced software to go in other companies' computers is inching
closer to Apple Inc's belief that software and hardware must be closely integrated for the sake of the user experience.Microsoft struck a deal to pay Nokia to make phones running Windows software in 2011 and a year later invested in Barnes & Noble's Nook e-reader. It then launched its own computer, the Surface tablet, in October, which rankled some PC makers initially.
In the face of declining PC sales and the onslaught of Apple's iPad, "Microsoft has taken more unconventional measures than they would have in the past," said Sid Parakh, an analyst at investment firm McAdams Wright Ragen.
This time,
Microsoft made extra efforts not to alienate its other PC makers,
talking to them before inking the deal, said sources familiar with
Microsoft's relations with its partners, and holding off from an
ownership stake.
"Microsoft reached
out (at the highest levels) a bit before all of it came out," one of the
people said. "There were multiple conversations. Clearly they put some
thought into it and definitely a schedule was pulled together."
Even so, world No.1 PC maker Hewlett-Packard Co (HP) issued a statement critical of the deal.
Dell "faces an
extended period of uncertainty and transition that will not be good for
its customers," HP said, adding that Dell's ability to invest in
products and services will be extremely limited with its debt load.
Lenovo Group Ltd
said it remains focused on products and customers rather than
"distracting financial maneuvers and major strategic shifts."
Microsoft, advised by Lazard Ltd, declined to comment
on the terms of the Dell loan, or what exactly it gets in return, but
made it clear it would look for "opportunities to support" companies
that buy in to Windows, in whatever form. That suggests this may not be
its last third-party investment.Still, there is no guarantee that Microsoft's loan will give it any sway over Dell at all. One former Microsoft executive said the deal was pointless.
"I know Michael
(Dell), he will continue to run his empire the way he has always done -
without any outside influence," said Joachim Kempin, once Microsoft's
top executive in charge of its relationships with PC makers, who left
the company in 2002.
PLATFORM WARSChief Executive Steve Ballmer made it clear last year that he sees Microsoft as a "devices and services" company with an explicit interest in hardware, whoever it is made by.
"Microsoft has every interest to keep such a key player in its ecosystem alive and well," said Al Hilwa, an analyst at tech research firm IDC. "Dell supplies a large number of Microsoft customers with hardware, and it is important that their confidence is bolstered in the overall Microsoft ecosystem."
Dell decided last
year to focus its tablet strategy on the new Windows 8 operating system,
in contrast to rivals such as Samsung , Asus and Lenovo, which are
hedging or leading with Google's Android system, and HP which said this week it would make a Google Chromebook.
Dell did experiment with Android with its Streak tablet in 2010, but it flopped.
"This investment
might help Microsoft influence whether Dell adopts Android or not, that
is likely the goal behind this," said Parakh.
The loan,
negotiated by Microsoft's Chief Financial Officer Peter Klein, takes the
form of a 10-year subordinated note and will pay 7 percent to 8 percent
interest, according to sources familiar with the deal.
It is not clear how
much sway Microsoft will have on Dell's strategy, but the two have been
close partners for 25 years, and will likely build on that.
"I don't think
Microsoft is going to run Dell at any time or have a dispositive say in
what Dell does," said one source familiar with Microsoft's thinking, who
asked not to be named. "Microsoft wants to continue to have a strong
and ever deepening relationship with Dell and you can take it as the
expectation on both sides."
PCs are clearly in decline, with sales falling last
year for the first time in a decade as the popularity of tablets surges.
Some analysts
suggest Microsoft got involved in the deal to learn more from Dell about
selling to businesses and individuals.
"Dell is one of the best at building hardware and
putting an operating system on it," said Michael Cherry, an analyst at
Directions on Microsoft, an independent consultancy.
With the rise of
Google trying to sell into enterprises, it should help Microsoft to have
some influence over one of the largest IT vendors, said Parakh.
Microsoft has not always been successful in its tech investments.
Its multi-billion dollar bets on cable firms AT&T Inc and Comcast Corp
in the late 1990s did not yield success. Its $150 million in a
struggling Apple in 1997 ended a long-running patent spat between the
two companies, but saved Apple and put it on course to eclipse Microsoft
financially.
"Apple is the model, and Microsoft can't become Apple
overnight," said Bartels at Forrester. "But it needs to have really good
partners."
(Additional reporting by Greg Roumeliotis, Poornima Gupta, Nadia Damouni; Editing by Ryan Woo)
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