Qualcomm president says splitting company may not create value


  • TECH
  • Friday, 04 Sep 2015

Doubting Derek: Aberle questions if a separation will actually solve the company's underlying issues.

Qualcomm Inc's president Derek Aberle, under pressure from activist hedge fund Jana Partners to improve the licensing and chip design firm's stock performance, sounded a cautionary note about a potential breakup of the company.

Stressing that the board and management do not expect to complete a review of a possible split until the end of the year, Aberle told Reuters that Qualcomm agrees with Jana that its stock is undervalued. Shares have fallen 25% over the past 12 months, whereas the S&P 500 is down 2.25%.

Aberle said that investors calling for a split are taking a "sum of the parts" analysis and believe that Qualcomm's two divisions – its highly profitable licensing arm and its chips unit - would be valued more highly as independent companies.

"You have to step back and say why is that and would a separation actually solve whatever the underlying issues are that are creating the current valuation?," he said. "You have to be careful that it's not too simplistic an analysis."

The company's current structure, Aberle said, also allows Qualcomm to leverage relationships with Chinese customers, since the chipmaker is well-positioned to help them expand to other countries.

At the same time, Aberle acknowledged that having both a chips and licensing division has at times created conflicts with customers, "but we manage it pretty well."

Dealing with Jana

Jana in April unleashed a public campaign to reform Qualcomm, calling its chip business "essentially worthless" at current valuations and pressing the company to spin it off or pursue strategic mergers or acquisitions.

Aberle said that when Qualcomm was approached by Jana, the hedge fund which owned US$2bil (RM8.47bil) in stock did not pressure it to pursue a breakup but rather wanted them to review a split as one option to unlock value.

It is also working on adding a third independent board member, whom Aberle declined to name. Qualcomm has already added two new board members in cooperation with Jana.

"A lot of the things (Jana) put on the table were very consistent with things we’d already been talking to our shareholders about and already been planning for a long time," Aberle said.

Qualcomm said in July it would reduce costs by about US$1.4bil (RM5.9bil), cut about 4,500 full-time staff, or 15% of its workforce, and boost capital returns to shareholders. — Reuters

Win a prize this Mother's Day by subscribing to our annual plan now! T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

Men or bears? Women’s safety debate pops on social media
Bukit Aman: 49 cases of NSRC officer impersonation scams being investigated, RM6.79mil lost
Fahmi: WhatsApp chatbot feature being developed to combat fake news
Trucker was watching Netflix in crash that killed grandparents, US cops say. He’s charged
Google unveils AI for predicting behaviour of human molecules
Microsoft’s Xbox�is planning more cuts after studio closings
Sperm whale speech – with ‘alphabet’ – is decoded. What other animals can AI translate?
US judge grills Apple exec about whether company is defying order to enable more iPhone payment options
Fahmi: App provider Telegram ready to work together to fight digital piracy
Delivery app Getir’s rise and fall fuelled by billions of dollars and strategy conflicts

Others Also Read