IBM
says sale of low-end server business gets regulator
approval
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[August 16, 2014]
(Reuters) - International
Business Machines Corp IBM.N said on Friday that U.S.
regulators had approved the $2.3 billion sale of its
low-end server business to Lenovo Group Ltd 0992.HK, as
the company continues its shift to more profitable
software and services like cloud computing and data
analytics. |
IBM has already divested $16 billion in annual revenue over the past
decade from low-margin businesses like personal computers and
printers.
The approval by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States came despite CIFUS members' concern, first reported by the
Wall Street Journal earlier this year, that IBM servers used in the
Pentagon's networks could be accessed remotely by Chinese spies and
compromised.
Lenovo has been through the secretive CFIUS process three times
before and has won approval each time, according to a source
familiar with the process.
CFIUS, an interagency group chaired by the Treasury Secretary,
reviews deals that could bring U.S. businesses under foreign
ownership and is required by law to assess any transaction involving
a state-owned firm.
Lenovo said in a statement that it remains on track to close the IBM
server deal by the end of the year.
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Analysts say Lenovo will likely find it easier than IBM to sell the
x86 servers to Chinese companies as Beijing tries to localize its IT
purchases in the wake of revelations about U.S. surveillance.
(Reporting By Lehar Maan in Bangalore; Editing by Maju Samuel)
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