Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s pending purchase of a controlling stake in H3C could mark the start of a new partnership with HP in routers, but is unlikely to affect its older partnership with Intel in the telecoms chips.
Semiconductor company Tsinghua Unigroup was already a name to watch after a string of major deals last year including a tie-up with Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), and now it’s adding to its allure with word of a major new alliance with Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ). This latest deal would trump the earlier one from Intel in size, and would see Unigroup buy a controlling 51 percent stake of HP’s China-based H3C unit, which makes routers and switches that compete with US giant Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO).
It’s not completely clear how much Unigroup would pay for the stake, though the amount would almost certainly be more than the $1.5 billion that Intel paid last year for 20 percent of a new company that Unigroup created through its merger of 2 of China’s leading telecoms chip designers. I’m no telecoms expert, but I’ll admit this latest deal is leaving me just a bit puzzled due to the very different natures of the businesses of H3C and the earlier tie-up involving Intel, which revolved around telecoms microchips. Read Full Post…