Toshiba Corp.’s
memory chips business is attracting more potential bidders ahead of an
end-March deadline, including Japanese government-backed entities,
people with knowledge of the matter said.
The Development Bank of
Japan is considering a joint offer with U.S. financial bidders, people
familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified discussing a
private matter.
The electronics conglomerate is seeking a sale of
the prized unit to make up for a multibillion-dollar writedown in its
nuclear operations. The semiconductor business is Toshiba’s crown jewel
and makes the memory chips that go into personal computers, smartphones
and data centers. It accounted for about 25 percent of Toshiba’s 5.67
trillion yen in revenue during the latest fiscal year.
The shares of Toshiba rose 3.5 percent in Tokyo on Friday.
The stock is down 33 percent this year after unveiling the potential
losses in late December.
Late on Thursday, a Toshiba executive
said he would welcome a bid from Innovation Network Corp. of Japan. INCJ
and DBJ are considering a joint bid to take more than a 30 percent
stake, the Yomiuri newspaper reported, but Chief Cabinet Secretary
Yoshihide Suga immediately poured cold water on the speculations, telling reporters in Tokyo that Japan is not considering the use of public funds for Toshiba.
Kaori
Hiraki, a spokeswoman for Toshiba, declined to comment on the progress
of chip unit sale and possible bidders. Representatives for DBJ and INCJ
declined to comment.
The number of interested parties, which
already include semiconductor makers and investments funds, may increase
beyond the current 10 and the company expects final bids by March 29,
the executive said. Western Digital Corp., SK Hynix Inc., Foxconn
Technology Group, Micron Technology Inc. and Kingston Technology Co. are
among those interested, one of the people said. On March 2, Foxconn
founder Terry Gou said he is “very serious” about making a bid for the memory chip business.
Representatives
for Kingston, Western Digital and Micron declined to comment. Foxconn’s
public relations department didn’t immediately respond to requests for
comment.
The bids could range from 700 billion yen to 1.8 trillion yen
($6.2 billion-$15.9 billion), one of the persons said. Toshiba, which
is willing to sell off a majority stake in the unit, is seeking bids
that value the entire business at 1.5 trillion yen. Toshiba is
struggling to regain its footing after disclosing an estimated loss of 712.5 billion yen in Westinghouse Electric. The Tokyo-based company has had to delay its earnings announcement twice, and has also floated the possibility of selling off the nuclear operations.
Financial
bidders may be likely but they will probably submit offers closer to
the deadline, the executive said. Among the financial bidders are Bain
Capital, Silver Lake Partners and KKR & Co., people familiar with
the matter have said.
The Toshiba executive declined to clarify whether the government-backed group is the Japanese company that is said to have expressed interested.
INCJ was created in 2009 with majority government ownership and a
mandate to promote the next generation of technologies and companies.
The fund put money into Renesas Electronics Corp., which was formed in
2010 from the struggling semiconductor operations of several Japanese
companies. INCJ later created Japan Display Inc. from the troubled
screenmaking units of Toshiba, Sony Corp., and Hitachi Ltd.
Toshiba has said it aims to complete the sale of the chips business by March 2018. Its three main lenders have agreed to extend support
to the company in the meantime, according to two people familiar with
the matter. Toshiba met with the banks on Wednesday, asking for
extension of its loans through April and offering equity and real estate
as collateral, the people said.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-03-17/toshiba-said-to-attract-10-potential-bidders-for-chips-business
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