Lenovo eyeing RIM acquisition or alliance
Research In Motion (RIM) has once again become the target of acquisition talks. This time it is China’s Lenovo, which is looking at a buyout of RIM or at the very least entering a strategic alliance.
Lenovo’s CFO Wang Wai Ming told Bloomberg at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland that the Beijing company is looking at the BlackBerry maker as an acquisition target or strategic alliance partner. “We are looking at all opportunities–RIM and many others. We’ll have no hesitation if the right opportunity comes along that could benefit us and shareholders,” he said. Wong added that his company has already spoken to RIM’s executives and bankers about various permutations and options to enter a strategic alliance, though exactly when Lenovo will put in a bid, if at all, has not been revealed.
Lenovo’s CFO Wang Wai Ming told Bloomberg at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland that the Beijing company is looking at the BlackBerry maker as an acquisition target or strategic alliance partner. “We are looking at all opportunities–RIM and many others. We’ll have no hesitation if the right opportunity comes along that could benefit us and shareholders,” he said. Wong added that his company has already spoken to RIM’s executives and bankers about various permutations and options to enter a strategic alliance, though exactly when Lenovo will put in a bid, if at all, has not been revealed.
BB10 apps may soon be seen on a Lenovo device
Ming’s comments come at a time when RIM CEO Thorsten Heins said this week that RIM is still undergoing a strategic review, with the possibility of licensing BB10 to other manufacturers and selling its hardware production unit. However, Heins was quick to point out that no decision will been taken till the company gauges the reception that BB10 will get when it launches on January 30. After enduring multi-year losses for the past few years, RIM’s shares have picked up before the imminent launch of BB10.
RIM has been subject of takeover speculation for some time now and the company itself has looked at options after its market share fell in the face of iOS and Android. Other companies have been rumoured to take over RIM over the past two years. Amazon was the first such company when rumours surfaced back in 2011, while in 2012, Samsung denied that it was going to acquire the Canadian company.
Lenovo’s bought IBM’s PC unit in 2005, but the global PC market is shrivelling and has kept the Chinese company from growing steadily. Since that acquisition there is a clear bifurcation in Lenovo’s PC division, with the Thinkpad line inherited from IBM and the Ideapad series, which is a result of the company’s own research and development. Lenovo's stranglehold on the business notebooks market could bode well for RIM.
A marriage between Lenovo and RIM could spell a change in fortune for the latter. Lenovo’s strong position in the Chinese market, insider knowledge of the world’s most populated country and its pedigreed manufacturing capabilities mark it out as a great suitor for RIM. It would help BlackBerry establish a strong base in Asia and gain a foothold in the burgeoning smartphone market in the continent.
A takeover of RIM by a Chinese company, however, does raise security questions, especially when in July last year, Heins said that the company had pulled back from expanding its China operations due to concerns over possible breach of sensitive networks. Though a deal focussed on just hardware instead of a full-scale buyout would not in all likelihood have any problems passing telecom regulations.
This isn’t the first time that Lenovo is in news lately for a possible acquisition. This month it completed the buyout of Brazilian consumer electronics maker CCE and among five acquisitions in 2011, the purchases of German electronics company Medion and the PC unit of Tokyo’s NEC Corp stand out.
RIM has been subject of takeover speculation for some time now and the company itself has looked at options after its market share fell in the face of iOS and Android. Other companies have been rumoured to take over RIM over the past two years. Amazon was the first such company when rumours surfaced back in 2011, while in 2012, Samsung denied that it was going to acquire the Canadian company.
Lenovo’s bought IBM’s PC unit in 2005, but the global PC market is shrivelling and has kept the Chinese company from growing steadily. Since that acquisition there is a clear bifurcation in Lenovo’s PC division, with the Thinkpad line inherited from IBM and the Ideapad series, which is a result of the company’s own research and development. Lenovo's stranglehold on the business notebooks market could bode well for RIM.
A marriage between Lenovo and RIM could spell a change in fortune for the latter. Lenovo’s strong position in the Chinese market, insider knowledge of the world’s most populated country and its pedigreed manufacturing capabilities mark it out as a great suitor for RIM. It would help BlackBerry establish a strong base in Asia and gain a foothold in the burgeoning smartphone market in the continent.
A takeover of RIM by a Chinese company, however, does raise security questions, especially when in July last year, Heins said that the company had pulled back from expanding its China operations due to concerns over possible breach of sensitive networks. Though a deal focussed on just hardware instead of a full-scale buyout would not in all likelihood have any problems passing telecom regulations.
This isn’t the first time that Lenovo is in news lately for a possible acquisition. This month it completed the buyout of Brazilian consumer electronics maker CCE and among five acquisitions in 2011, the purchases of German electronics company Medion and the PC unit of Tokyo’s NEC Corp stand out.
Report by :
Nikhil Subramaniam
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