TAIPEI (Reuters) - Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC Corp's shares fell as much as 4 percent on Monday after the sale of half of its holding in audio technology firm Beats Electronics back to Beats' founders raised concern over its strategy.
HTC bought 50.1
percent of Beats Electronics, which was founded by U.S. rapper and music
producer Dr. Dre and Beats' current CEO Jimmy Iovine,
for $309 million in August last year, as part of its efforts to
differentiate its phones and enhance branding amid rising competition.
But it said in a weekend statement that it sold 25
percent back to Beats' founders for $150 million. It will continue to
work closely with the maker of high-end headphones and speakers.
"We find HTC's
announcement of cutting back its investment in Beats puzzling," said
Morgan Stanley in a research report, adding that the structure of the
whole deal from acquisition to disposal does not make much strategic and
financial sense to HTC shareholders without disclosure of more details.
"Reducing its holding to 25.57 percent signals HTC's
separation from Beats' operations. Possibly it implies that there was
not much synergy between the two companies from the beginning."
HTC will remain
Beats' largest shareholder with 25.1 percent, with Beats' founders
holding the remainder. It will hold a 25.57 percent voting right. Some
models in its latest One series of phones use Beats audio technology.
The share sale
"provides Beats with more flexibility for global expansion while
maintaining HTC's major stake and commercial exclusivity in mobile,"
HTC's statement said.
By 0212 GMT, shares of HTC has lost 3.83 percent, versus broader market's 2.11 percent fall.
Fierce competition
from Samsung's Galaxy phones could be pushing HTC towards a more
conservative operation and centralized business, according to KBC
Concord Asset Management Investment and Research Manager Henry Chen.
In a separate statement, HTC said it had agreed to lend
Beats T$6.74 billion ($224.85 million) for one year with an interest
rate of LIBOR+1.5 percent to LIBOR+7.5 percent.
HTC's profit more
than halved in the second quarter, with the company struggling to regain
market share lost to Samsung and Apple Inc.
Resource : Yahoo News
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