Report says Samsung mulling BlackBerry buy, BlackBerry stock climbs, BlackBerry denies report# MobileDevelopment - 移动开发
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January 14, 2015 2:48 PM
Mark Sullivan
The biggest handset maker in the world, Samsung, is reportedly considering
buying the long-troubled phone maker BlackBerry for as much as $7.5 billion.
Reuters said it spoke to a person familiar with the matter who believes the
two companies discussed a deal last week, and that Samsung is mainly
interested in BlackBerry’s patent portfolio.
The source said Samsung proposed an initial price range of $13.35 to $15.49
per share, representing a premium of 38 percent to 60 percent over
BlackBerry’s current trading price, Reuters reports.
BlackBerry’s stock spiked upward 30 percent on the news.
But BlackBerry is denying the whole thing. “BlackBerry has not engaged in
discussions with Samsung with respect to any possible offer to purchase
BlackBerry,” the company said in a statement.
This, of course, doesn’t mean a deal isn’t in the works. It could be
mutually beneficial: Samsung may see BlackBerry’s patent portfolio as fuel
to gain back some mojo in its fight against Apple. And BlackBerry, despite
getting a bit of its old mojo back under new CEO John Chen, is still far
from out of the woods and has reason to welcome a graceful exit courtesy of
Samsung.
Samsung’s offer would place a valuation of between $6 billion and $7.5
billion on BlackBerry.
The net here is that we either have a legitimate deal on the table, or we
have one red-faced news organization and a bunch of happy BlackBerry
stockholders today — the ones who are dumping the stock right now, anyway.
Mark Sullivan
The biggest handset maker in the world, Samsung, is reportedly considering
buying the long-troubled phone maker BlackBerry for as much as $7.5 billion.
Reuters said it spoke to a person familiar with the matter who believes the
two companies discussed a deal last week, and that Samsung is mainly
interested in BlackBerry’s patent portfolio.
The source said Samsung proposed an initial price range of $13.35 to $15.49
per share, representing a premium of 38 percent to 60 percent over
BlackBerry’s current trading price, Reuters reports.
BlackBerry’s stock spiked upward 30 percent on the news.
But BlackBerry is denying the whole thing. “BlackBerry has not engaged in
discussions with Samsung with respect to any possible offer to purchase
BlackBerry,” the company said in a statement.
This, of course, doesn’t mean a deal isn’t in the works. It could be
mutually beneficial: Samsung may see BlackBerry’s patent portfolio as fuel
to gain back some mojo in its fight against Apple. And BlackBerry, despite
getting a bit of its old mojo back under new CEO John Chen, is still far
from out of the woods and has reason to welcome a graceful exit courtesy of
Samsung.
Samsung’s offer would place a valuation of between $6 billion and $7.5
billion on BlackBerry.
The net here is that we either have a legitimate deal on the table, or we
have one red-faced news organization and a bunch of happy BlackBerry
stockholders today — the ones who are dumping the stock right now, anyway.