Oracle Corp. announced today that it has offered to buy middleware vendor BEA Systems Inc. for $6.66 billion, or $17 per share, in cash.
Oracle said it had written to BEA’s board of directors on Tuesday to make the offer, which represents a premium of 25 per cent over BEA’s closing share price yesterday. The Wall Street Journal valued the offer at $6.66 billion.
BEA was a pioneer in the market for Java application server software used to deploy business applications, competing with products like IBM’s WebSphere. It has been rumored to be an acquisition target on numerous occasions but has managed to retain its independence.
“This proposal is the culmination of repeated conversations with BEA’s management over the last several years,” Oracle president Charles Phillips said in a statement. “We look forward to completing a friendly transaction as soon as possible.”
However, BEA executives were not quoted in the statement, and there was no indication early today as to whether the company is open to being acquired.
Oracle said the acquisition would help it to beef up its own middleware suite, an important area for the company that links several families of business applications it has acquired.
The company said it would protect the investments of BEA customers if the deal were to go ahead.
“Our continuing support commitment has been amply demonstrated with all of our previous acquisitions, including PeopleSoft and Siebel. BEA will be no different,” Phillips said.