Monday, March 7th 2011

Western Digital to Acquire Hitachi Global Storage Technologies

Western Digital and Hitachi, Ltd. announced today that they have entered into a definitive agreement whereby WD will acquire Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (Hitachi GST), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hitachi, Ltd., in a cash and stock transaction valued at approximately $4.3 billion. The proposed combination will result in a customer-focused storage company, with significant operating scale, strong global talent and the industry's broadest product lineup backed by a rich technology portfolio.

Under the terms of the agreement, WD will acquire Hitachi GST for $3.5 billion in cash and 25 million WD common shares valued at $750 million, based on a WD closing stock price of $30.01 as of March 4, 2011. Hitachi, Ltd. will own approximately ten percent of Western Digital shares outstanding after issuance of the shares and two representatives of Hitachi will be added to the WD board of directors at closing. The transaction has been approved by the board of directors of each company and is expected to close during the third calendar quarter of 2011, subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals. WD plans to fund the transaction with a combination of existing cash and total debt of approximately $2.5 billion.

WD expects the transaction to be immediately accretive to its earnings per share on a non-GAAP basis, excluding acquisition-related expenses, restructuring charges and amortization of intangibles.

The resulting company will retain the Western Digital name and remain headquartered in Irvine, California. John Coyne will remain chief executive officer of WD, Tim Leyden chief operating officer and Wolfgang Nickl chief financial officer. Steve Milligan, president and chief executive officer of Hitachi GST, will join WD at closing as president, reporting to John Coyne.

"The acquisition of Hitachi GST is a unique opportunity for WD to create further value for our customers, stockholders, employees, suppliers and the communities in which we operate." said John Coyne, president and chief executive officer of WD. "We believe this step will result in several key benefits: enhanced R&D capabilities, innovation and expansion of a rich product portfolio, comprehensive market coverage and scale that will enhance our cost structure and ability to compete in a dynamic marketplace. The skills and contributions of both workforces were key considerations in assessing this compelling opportunity. We will be relying on the proven integration capabilities of both companies to assure the ongoing satisfaction of our customers and to bring this combination to successful fruition."

"This brings together two industry leaders with consistent track records of strong execution and industry outperformance," said Steve Milligan, president and chief executive officer, Hitachi Global Storage Technologies. "Together we can provide customers worldwide with the industry's most compelling and diverse set of products and services, from innovative personal storage to solid state drives for the enterprise."

Hiroaki Nakanishi, president, Hitachi, Ltd. said, "As the former CEO of Hitachi GST, I always believed in the potential of Hitachi GST to become a larger and more agile company. This is a strategic combination of two industry leaders, both growing and profitable. It provides an opportunity for the new company to increase customer and shareholder value and expand into new markets. Additionally, it is important to us that WD shares common values with Hitachi GST to create a more global company that is well positioned to define a broader role in the evolving storage industry."

WD's exclusive financial adviser on the transaction is Bank of America Merrill Lynch; its lead legal adviser is O'Melveny & Myers LLP. Goldman, Sachs & Co serves as financial adviser to Hitachi, Ltd. and Hitachi GST. Legal advisers to Hitachi, Ltd. and Hitachi GST are Morrison Foerster LLP and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP & Affiliates, respectively.
Add your own comment

43 Comments on Western Digital to Acquire Hitachi Global Storage Technologies

#26
HalfAHertz
Has there ever been much competition in the hdd segment? I cannot remember a single point where all the top drivers weren't in spitting distance from one another performance wise. 5-10MB/s and 2-4ns of latency don't really matter that much to me so I always went with Seagate because they're usually the cheapest around these parts.
Posted on Reply
#27
dir_d
Maxtor is Seagate, All that really is left is WD, Samsung and Seagate.
Posted on Reply
#28
HalfAHertz
There are some more smaller players like Toshiba(which kind of suck) and Hyundai(not sure if they make or rebrand hdds)

edit: wow look at the long list of defunct hdd manufacturers
Posted on Reply
#29
Easy Rhino
Linux Advocate
this gives western digital nearly 50% market share.
Posted on Reply
#30
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
HalfAHertzedit: wow look at the long list of defunct hdd manufacturers
Hey whadday know. DEC made HDD's but sold off to Quantum. Quantum Fireballs. ^^
Posted on Reply
#32
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
dir_dMaxtor is Seagate, All that really is left is WD, Samsung and Seagate.
And Toshiba.
Posted on Reply
#33
Easy Rhino
Linux Advocate
it was only 2 years ago that western digital actually surpassed seagate as the largest disk drive manufacturer. man, they have been on a role.
Posted on Reply
#34
timta2
jsfitz54I bought 2 IBM/Hitachi drives, 46GB, 10 years ago that were bad drives. Cost then $200 each. I never purchased Hitachi again.

I will never be interested in Hitachi again. So for me this is a bad because I have only bought WD or Samsung drives.
I bought several Western Digital drives 10 years ago that were pieces of crap. How much sense would it make for me to avoid their product line today because of that? And it's not like it's even the same company. I'm just saying things change over that many years. I have two Hitachi 7K2000 drives that have been awesome. I've dealt with more bad WD drives than I care to remember. Personally, I think ALL brands of hard drives are much more reliable than they used to be.
Posted on Reply
#35
AsRock
TPU addict
n-sterHopefully they will make a clear difference between the Hitachi drives, WD has a good rep for now, if we find out Hitachi drives come i some of the WD drives, I'm not sure if it will be good for them

On another note, maybe PS3s and Dell computers etc etc will come with WD drives now :p
My PS3 and Dell laptop came with WD HDDs.
Posted on Reply
#36
Praetorian
I always wonder what would happen with HDD if they would finally manage to increase the durability of SSD at the same or better level than of HDD. And also to decrease their price.
But keep the size differences ;) Hmm?
Posted on Reply
#37
yogurt_21
*waits for WD deskstar aka deathstar drives*
Posted on Reply
#38
Praetorian
Hitachi don't have bad HDD actually. I have a 300GB one made 6 or 7 years ago and still kikin' like in day 1, dead silent even full. But it's made in Japan, not China or Taiwan... ;)
Posted on Reply
#39
LAN_deRf_HA
The biggest benefit for us would probably be new drives using combined tech from both companies. Though I have a hard time imagining hitachi bringing much to the table tech wise.
Posted on Reply
#40
Praetorian
LAN_deRf_HAThe biggest benefit for us would probably be new drives using combined tech from both companies. Though I have a hard time imagining hitachi bringing much to the table tech wise.
Were the first with 2 TB if I recall right....or 3?:ohwell:
Posted on Reply
#41
Roph
Heh, I have an old 80GB hitachi drive from 2003 or so inside my case, disconnected currently (no spare IDE) but it still works when I connect it up. I use it as 80GB of dormant backup. :) Previously I'd had it in 24/7 use for around 5-6 years.

The "deathstar" jabs at current Hitachi DeskStars are really unfounded. Try reading Wikipedia's info about it.

It's like saying all seagate 7200.x drives should be avoided due to that nasty firmware issue with the 1.5GB models.

It reminds me of England's old blanket hatred of Lancias, due to the Beta model rust problem :(
Posted on Reply
#42
n-ster
I got 4 Hitachi drives die on me (laptop drives) in a few months

finally got one that works, old but barely use it (this was in ~2006/7)
Posted on Reply
#43
Batou1986
Hitachi laptop drives are complete junk, I replace about 10+ in a months span for customers
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
May 9th, 2024 00:07 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts