Toshiba Says It's Willing to Talk With Western Digital About Chip Unit Sale
Toshiba said it was open to talks with Western Digital
in their dispute over the sale of the Japanese conglomerate's prized
chip unit - an apparent olive branch after it chose another suitor as
preferred bidder.The two have been feuding bitterly and Western Digital, which jointly runs Toshiba's main semiconductor plant, has sought a US court injunction to prevent any deal that does not have its consent.
The softer tone from Toshiba
comes on a day of further indignities as the crisis-wracked
conglomerate saw itself demoted to the second section of the Tokyo Stock
Exchange and estimated bigger losses for the past financial year.This week it chose a consortium of Bain Capital and Japanese government investors as preferred bidder
for the unit, the world's No. 2 producer of NAND flash chips. It wants
to clinch a deal, worth some $18 billion, by June 28, the day of its
shareholders meeting.
Western Digital used to be a good partner, so we want to continue
talks. I'm disappointed with the current dispute," Toshiba CEO Satoshi
Tsunakawa told a news conference, adding it was important that they
joined forces to better compete against bigger rival Samsung Electronics.We
want Western Digital to jointly invest to fight against Samsung. It
will be so disappointing if we can't do so because of the dispute he
said.
But in a sign that tensions were still high, Tsunakawa also
said Toshiba was not going to be the first to propose the US firm join
the consortium and it was still considering whether to block Western
Digital employees not based at the plant from accessing joint venture
data servers.
Tsunakawa also said he did not expect any changes to the make-up of the consortium before June 28.
Western
Digital's offer had not found favour on price and because the US firm
wanted to take control of the unit, he said, adding that he expected
executives from Toshiba to still be running operations after the sale.His
comments come after sources familiar with matter said earlier this week
that the Bain consortium members had made resolving the dispute with
Western Digital a condition of their investment.
Hynix hurdles : South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix
Inc is also part of the Bain consortium and its membership has raised
concerns that the winning bid may find it difficult to clear anti-trust
reviews.
Its presence has made Western Digital reluctant to join
the group in its current form due to worries that high-level technology
for NAND chips, which provide long-term data storage, could be leaked to
its rival, sources familiar with the matter have said.But
Tsunakawa said SK Hynix would not be holding any equity and would not be
involved in management - an arrangement that was unlikely to raise
regulatory red flags and would prevent leaks of key technology
information.
SK Hynix, which is relatively weak in NAND flash
memory chips, has said it has joined the group because it sees new
business opportunities. It will provide half of the JPY 850 billion
($7.6 billion or roughly Rs. 49,262 crores) that Bain plans to put up in
the form of financing, sources have said.
Earlier in the day,
Toshiba flagged a net loss of around $9 billion (roughly Rs. 58,060
crores) for the year ended in March with negative shareholders' equity
of around $5.2 billion, both worse than expected on an increase in
liabilities at bankrupt nuclear unit Westinghouse and potential legal
damages.
With negative shareholder equity confirmed, the Tokyo
Stock Exchange said it would move Toshiba's listing to the second
section of the bourse from August 1 - the latest in a series of
humiliating developments since December for a firm that has been in
business for more than 140 years.
Toshiba also received regulatory
approval to delay filing its annual earnings by more than a month amid a
prolonged accounting investigation at Westinghouse. It is the sixth
time since 2015 that Toshiba has delayed an earnings filing.Regulators
have now given Toshiba until August 10 instead of June 30 to submit the
filing. Failure to gain an extension would have put the troubled
company's stock exchange listing in further jeopardy, although it still
needs to dig itself out of negative shareholders' equity by the end of
this financial year to stay listed.
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