Looking
to shift its software offerings, VMware
has struck a $1.54 billion deal to bolster its mobile technology.
VMware
said on Wednesday that it had agreed to buy AirWatch, a start-up based in
Atlanta that makes mobile management and security software for businesses.
VMware is paying about $1.18 billion in cash and $365 million in installment
payments and assumed unvested equity.
The
acquisition will be financed in part with about $1 billion of debt to be
provided by EMC, the majority owner of VMware. The deal, subject to regulatory
approval, has been approved by the boards of VMware and AirWatch and is
expected to close by the end of March.
The
announcement came as VMware, based in Palo Alto, Calif., released its
preliminary results for the fourth quarter, saying it expected revenue of $1.48
billion, 15 percent higher than in the period a year earlier. VMware’s stock
was up nearly 3 percent in trading before the market opened on Wednesday.
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The
company’s deal for AirWatch is its latest move to redefine its product
portfolio in response to a changed technology landscape.
“With
this acquisition VMware will add a foundational element to our end-user
computing portfolio that will enable our customers to turbocharge their mobile
work force without compromising security,” Patrick P. Gelsinger, VMware’s chief
executive, said in a statement.
With
more companies allowing employees to use their own mobile devices, AirWatch
makes software to manage mobile applications and data, including a security
component. The company says it has more than 10,000 customers around the world
and more than 1,600 employees.
VMware
has been active as both a buyer and seller in recent years. In 2013, it
completed a plan to sell assets as part of its broader shift in strategy.
“By
joining a proven innovator like VMware, we now have an opportunity to bring our
leading-edge solutions to an even broader set of customers and partners to help
them optimize for the mobile-cloud world,” Alan Dabbiere, the co-founder and
chairman of AirWatch, said in a statement.
The
AirWatch team is expected to continue to report to the company’s chief
executive, John Marshall, as part of VMware’s end-user computing group.
Morrison
& Foerster provided legal advice to VMware.
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more software offerings, visit Dyman & Associates Risk
Management Projects.
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