Although David Lammers of
Semiconductor International
might be better known for his consummate "reportering" skills (with no
apologies to George W), he's also a pretty good blogger when he gets
around to it.
His latest posting, the snappily headlined
"M&A Activity Picks Up in Downturn Dog Days,"
discusses the wave of mergers and acquisitions' goings-on in the
semiconductor equipment and materials space over the past several
months. In addition to his own observations, Dave gets good quote from
industry sources like Gartner Dataquest's Dean Freeman and Entegris'
John Goodman about certain done deals (like Entegris' snap-up of Poco
Graphite) as well as some of the behind-the-scenes M&A rustlings
(ASMI vs. AMAT).
In addition to his musings, Dave has put together a handy hyperlink
list of 20+ M&A-related headlines going back to mid-April, from
Jordan Valley's move to scoop up fellow x-ray metrology vendor Bede to
Carl Zeiss SMT's recent bid to acquire Israeli photomask specialists,
Pixer Technology. (Hmmm, the list starts and ends with metrology
companies, and also includes the check-writing activities of
KLA-Tencor, Nanometrics, and Agilent in the same domain. Nothing like
sector consolidation during a downturn!)
The biggest deal by far on the M&A hit parade remains Dow
Chemical's bid to buy fellow materials purveyor Rohm und Haas for a
whopping $19 billion
in cash (well, at least cash for R&H's shares).
One company that's also been the talk of the M&A crowd, albeit
in a different market, is Dave's own employer, Reed Business
Information (RBI), a unit of megamedia corporation, Reed Elsevier. In
addition to
Semiconductor International and the other remaining properties of what was once Cahners Publishing, RBI's holdings include
New Scientist, Daily Variety,
Test and Measurement World, and scores more.
After announcing its intent to sell off RBI in late February, the
parent company hasn't had much to say about any potential deals--until
the past few weeks. The UK's
Sunday Telegraph reported in
mid-July that there had been two-dozen "expressions of interest" by
potential buyers, while reports in Saturday's (Aug. 9)
London Times
say that the first round of bidding was to have closed yesterday
(Monday), with private-equity players like Cinven, Apollo, and Bain
Capital in the mix.
Reed-Elsevier's CEO Sir Crispin "Could I get a few of your crisps"
Davis reportedly told employees that he "hoped to complete the sale [of
RBI] in the second half of the year." In the PR announcing the parent's
most recent quarterly results, Sir Crisps said, "The planned divestment
of Reed Business Information is progressing, and we are seeing strong
buyer interest in the business."
Those familiar with the particulars have put the likely asking
price in the neighborhood of a cool billion quid (that's $2 billion in
real money). The Crispy One's own comments have also given legs to the
possibility that RBI might be sold off in pieces or to a group who
might break it up after purchase.
The ultimate fate of Dave and the rest of the
SI team
remains in doubt while the dealmakers work the dog-and-pony circuit,
but I would be quite surprised if whoever ends up buying RBI--or the
bits of old Cahners that might include my colleagues' trade
mag/site--decides to pull the plug on such a prestigious franchise as
Semiconductor International.