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Posted July 06, 2009 by David Hale in Technology News
By Lucas Mearian
July 6, 2009 04:37 PM ET

In light of a new buyout offer for Data Domain Inc. by EMC Corp., NetApp Inc. said today it plans to review "all of its options" in considering a counteroffer for the deduplication vendor. "In response to EMC's revised, unsolicited offer, the NetApp Board of Directors will carefully weigh its options, keeping in mind both its fiduciary duty to its stockholders and its disciplined acquisition strategy," NetApp CEO Dan Warmenhoven said in a statement. He promised an update "shortly."

EMC Corp. today upped its all-cash offer to purchase Data Domain from $1.8 billion to $2.1 billion, once again one trumping NetApp, which had offered $1.9 billion. EMC said that offer stands until midnight July 17. While Data Domain has scheduled a special stockholders meeting on Aug. 14 to consider and vote on the NetApp merger proposal, EMC's offer is different from a merger agreement and Data Domain's stockholders need only decide to sell their shares to EMC by July 17.

Meanwhile, in an interview with Computerworld, an EMC executive argued that his company's offer is the most logical one for Data Domain shareholders. Matthew Olton, worldwide head of mergers and acquisitions at EMC, said his company is "dramatically" larger than NetApp and far more capable of infusing money into Data Domain to increase product development and worldwide marketing and sales. NetApp last year had $3.4 billion in sales while EMC reported $14.8 billion.

"I just have to believe it's much more of a strain on Netapp to digest an acquisition of this size than it is [for EMC]," Olton said. In their respective offers for Data Domain, both NetApp and EMC included termination fees to be paid if Data Domain decided to walk away after agreeing to a merger. Today, EMC announced it had dropped any such deal protection clause. NetApp still has a termination fee in its proposal that would require Data Domain to pay it $57 million if it walks away from a deal.
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