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posted by martyb on Tuesday March 06 2018, @05:21PM   Printer-friendly
from the failure-to-communicate dept.

Qualcomm's board members, including several seats controlled by Broadcom, were set to vote on Broadcom's acquisition attempt on Tuesday. However, the annual shareholder meeting has been postponed for 30 days by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States:

Broadcom Ltd. is on course to win all six of the seats it's seeking on Qualcomm Inc.'s board, giving it a majority to push forward with its hostile takeover even as a U.S. government panel forced a delay of the final tally amid concerns about the deal's threats to national security.

Based on a count of more than half of the votes already cast, Broadcom would win a majority of Qualcomm's board seats, according to information obtained by Bloomberg. If that result holds up when the final vote takes place, Broadcom would have a mandate to overturn Qualcomm management's opposition to the $117 billion deal. Representatives for Broadcom and Qualcomm declined to comment.

The Committee is taking preemptive action this time:

The panel, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or Cfius, typically works behind closed doors and reviews deals only after they are announced. In the case of Qualcomm, the panel, which includes representatives from multiple government agencies, is looking at the acquisition before it is complete. In practice, reviews by Cfius often lead to the demise of deals.

[...] Already, Cfius has taken a more proactive role, blocking several major deals by Chinese buyers in recent months. Among them were proposed acquisitions of MoneyGram, a money transfer company, and Lattice Semiconductor.

Previously: President Trump Blocks Acquisition of Lattice Semiconductor
Broadcom Raises Bid for Qualcomm to $121 Billion


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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Tuesday March 06 2018, @07:21PM

    by frojack (1554) on Tuesday March 06 2018, @07:21PM (#648622) Journal

    The Register [theregister.co.uk] has also reported wome worries about the deal.

    "We are concerned about the possibility of a European company handling sensitive data of EU citizens falling in the hands of a company that is based in Singapore, where data protection standards are lower than in the EU," Josef Weidenholzer, vice president of the Socialists & Democrats, the second-largest party in European Parliament, told The Financial Times.

    Niels Annen, a Social Democrat member of parliament from Hamburg, said: "Qualcomm made a range of assurances regarding the plant in Hamburg that were very positive. There were no such signals from Broadcom and that has raised concerns."

    One data protection expert, who asked not to be named, speculated that there could be concerns about chip compromise and data exfiltration.

    I just wish the blue proxies and white proxies would stop flooding my inbox just because I happen to own a few shares of Qualcomm from way back.

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