No guarantee that a deal will happen at this time
The traditional hard drive market is down with many computers, tablets, and other electronic devices that need storage moving to faster and more rugged flash-based offerings. That means that sales of traditional HDDs are faltering due to increased demand on the market for tabletslike the iPad that are taking sales from the notebooks and netbooks.
The largest hard drive maker in the market is Seagate and the company has announced that it is in talks to be purchased by a private buyer and taken off the publicly traded market. Seagate is mum on exactly what company it is in talks with and this is not the first time that Seagate has entered talks with a buyer.
Reuters reports that TPG Capital and private equity firm Silver Lake held early talks with Seagate on a buyout previously, but that deal never materialized. Reuters cites a source familiar with the matter that claims Silver Lake is no longer involved in the talks and TPG is either working with another party on new buyout talks or is actively seeking a partner for a possible purchase of Seagate.
None of the involved parties has offered any comment on the talks so far. Seagate also notes that at this point there is no assurance that a deal will be accepted or offered. Seagate's board is evaluating the offer and other alternatives. This is the first time that Seagate has offered confirmation that talks of a buyout were underway.
Analyst Kaushik Roy from Wedbush Securities says that the reason private equity firms are eyeing Seagate is that its stock price is down to low levels. Roy figures that Seagate is looking good to equity firms that want to buy now and wait out the poor demand for HDDs because demand is expected to improve. Seagate is also taking steps to become a player in the SSD market with it and Samsung announcing a joint development deal recently.
Roy said, "The weakness in the stock is in end-demand and market related, it's not that the company is mis-executing. So private equity is looking at it and saying, geez, these are cheap stocks."
Source ...
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Ult x64 - SP1/ Windows 8 Pro x64Intel Core i5-3570K 4.6GHz8GB (2X4GB) DDR3 1600 Corsair Vengeance CL8 1.5vSapphire HD 7770 Vapor-X OC 1GB DDR5
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- 76~2.0
- OS
- Windows 7 Ult x64 - SP1/ Windows 8 Pro x64
- CPU
- Intel Core i5-3570K 4.6GHz
- Motherboard
- Gigabyte GA-Z77X UD3H, f18
- Memory
- 8GB (2X4GB) DDR3 1600 Corsair Vengeance CL8 1.5v
- Graphics Card(s)
- Sapphire HD 7770 Vapor-X OC 1GB DDR5
- Sound Card
- Onboard VIA VT2021
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 22" LCD Dell
- Screen Resolution
- 1680x1050
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 840Pro 128GB SSD,
Seagate Barracuda 500GB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache, Seagate Barracuda 1TB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache,
- PSU
- Corsair HX650W
- Case
- Cooler Master Storm Scout
- Cooling
- Corsair H80 2x12cm Noctua NF P12 , 2x14cm case fans
- Keyboard
- Logitech Wave
- Mouse
- CM Sentinel
- Internet Speed
- Dismal
- Antivirus
- Avast
- Browser
- Opera Next
- Other Info
- Haswell laptop: HP Envy 17t-j, i7-4700MQ, GeForce 740M 2GB DDR3, 17.3" Full HD 1920x1080, 16GB RAM, Samsung 840 Pro 128GB, 1TB Hitachi 7200 HDD,
Desktop: eSATA ports,
External eSATA Seagate 500GB SATA2 7200rpm,
External WD USB 500GB