Smartphone maker
BlackBerry has agreed to go private in a $4.7 billion deal led by its biggest
shareholder, allowing the on-the-go email pioneer to regroup away from public
scrutiny after years of falling fortunes and slumping market share, according
to reports by Reuters.
The
$9 a share tentative offer, from a consortium led by property and casualty
insurer Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd, will set a floor for any counteroffers
that might emerge for Blackberry, which has been on the block since August.
As an
investor, Fairfax Chief Executive Prem Watsa is often described as the Canadian
Warren Buffett because he also takes the long view.
Blackberry
shares peaked above $148 in June 2008 when the company's devices were still the
top choice for bankers, politicians and lawyers.
The
stock, halted pending the announcement on Monday, closed below the offer price
on Nasdaq, at $8.82, indicating
the market's lack of faith that other bids would emerge.
"I
would think a competing buyout offer is quite unlikely," said Elvis
Picardo, strategist at Global Securities in Vancouver. "The miniscule
premium, and the muted market reaction, is another indication that the market
views the odds of a competing bid as slim."
BlackBerry,
based in Waterloo, Ontario, once dominated the market for secure on-your-hip
email. But it introduced consumer-friendly touchscreen smartphones only after
it lost the lead to Apple Inc's iPhone and devices using Google Inc's Android
operating system.
BlackBerry
has until November 4 to seek superior offers, which the Fairfax group has the
right to match. The group is seeking financing from Bank of America Merrill
Lynch and BMO Capital Markets to complete the deal and has until that November
4 deadline to conduct its due diligence.
A
BlackBerry statement did not name members of the consortium, although many in
the financial community see Canada's deep-pocketed and influential pension funds
as likely participants.
"We
need to be careful given disclosure constraints, but we can say that we are
focused on a strong Canadian solution," said Fairfax spokesman Paul
Rivett.
The
pension funds, with assets around the world, traditionally take a long-term
view in their investment decisions. Officials at the biggest funds either did
not reply to requests for comment, said they had no information or declined to
comment.
"We
never discuss whether or not we plan to enter into any investment," said
Deborah Allan, spokeswoman for Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.
Watsa
stepped down from the BlackBerry board of directors in August, citing a
potential conflict of interest, as the company said it was exploring a sale.
Canada's
Globe and Mail newspaper quoted Watsa as saying that a significant amount of
the equity in the deal will come from within the country. The consortium
included neither strategic players, nor other technology firms, he said.
BlackBerry's
recent challenging years have been in stark contrast to the rapid growth it
previously enjoyed.
The
Z10 touchscreen device that the company hoped would claw back market share from
the iPhone thudded badly at launch in January, and it has lost ground even in
emerging markets where it had carved out an important role.
A
spokeswoman for phone company MTN Nigeria, for example, said that while
BlackBerrys are still very relevant in Nigeria, "the adoption rate has
declined significantly from a year ago due to lack of newer low to mid-end
smart phone models."
In Brazil,
locally made iPhones are the first choice for government workers. "I have
never seen a Brazilian government employee using a BlackBerry," said one
government source.
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