Toshiba Corp. has narrowed the number of bidders for its
semiconductor business from about 10 interested parties to a smaller group that
includes Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. and Korea’s SK Hynix Inc.,
according to people familiar with the matter.
The other remaining contenders include private equity firm Silver
Lake Management and chipmaker Broadcom, which are collaborating on the deal,
said the people, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.
Offers, which are non-binding at this point, have come in at about 2 trillion
yen ($18 billion), they said.
Japan’s government is likely to oppose a sale to Hon Hai or Hynix
because of the strategic value of Toshiba’s technology, the people said.
Toshiba will encourage Japanese companies to participate in the bidding
process, though none are in the current group, the people said.
Toshiba is selling assets to contend with enormous writedowns in
its Westinghouse
nuclear business, stemming from cost overuns and construction
projects delays. The Japanese company put Westinghouse into Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection last week and said it may book a loss of as much as 1.01
trillion yen for the year that ended in March. The Tokyo-based company plans to
choose a winner for the chips business by summer so it can close the deal by
March of 2018, one executive said last week.
Toshiba spokesman Tomoyuki Numata declined to comment. Hon Hai and
Hynix declined to comment.
Hedge fund Effissimo Capital Management Pte disclosed Friday it has
boosted its stake in Toshiba to 9.8 percent. The firm, set up by former
colleagues of Japanese activist Yoshiaki Murakami, said last month it had
become the company’s largest shareholder.
Toshiba’s problems are piling up. This
week, the company told its banks that its funding needs may reach 1 trillion
yen ($9 billion) in the year started April 1 and may fall short by 300 billion
yen if it uses its existing credit line, people familiar with the matter said.
That sent Toshiba’s bond risk soaring as investors grow concerned about its
ability to repay debt.
Toshiba has also said it may be difficult
for the firm to report results by next week’s April 11 deadline. Another delay,
which would be its third, could affect the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s review of its
qualifications for staying listed.
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. and Mizuho
Financial Group Inc., Toshiba’s main lenders, downgraded Toshiba’s rating one
notch to the second level of a five-tier scale, according to people with
knowledge of the issue. The banks cut as they forecast huge losses and excess
debt, said the people, who asked not to be identified.
“The substance of the company is
deteriorating,” said Katsuyuki Tokushima, the chief fixed-income analyst at NLI
Research Institute, a unit of Nippon Life Insurance Co.
The flash-memory chips unit is Toshiba’s
most valuable asset and the company resisted selling control until it became
swamped in losses. Shareholders approved a sale of the prized business in a
special meeting last month but only after publicly deriding management.
“Toshiba is now a laughing-stock to the
whole world,” one shareholder said at the time. “I think all of you are
incompetent as managers.”
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