Dell agrees to show Icahn books

Activist investor has joined opposition to plan to take computer maker private

Investor Carl Icahn is to see Dell’s books. Photograph: Chip East/Reuters
Investor Carl Icahn is to see Dell’s books. Photograph: Chip East/Reuters

Dell has agreed to give Carl Icahn a closer look at its books less than a week after the activist investor joined a growing chorus of opposition to founder Michael Dell's plan to take the world's number three personal computer maker private.

Dell shares rose 0.8 per cent to $14.27, above the take-private offer price of $13.65, after Mr Icahn said that his Icahn Enterprises reached a confidentiality agreement with the company and looks forward to "its review of Dell's confidential information."

Dell was not immediately available for comment.

Mr Icahn demanded last week that Dell pay out $15.7 billion in special dividends instead of going private. He had argued that a proposed $24.4 billion buyout by Michael Dell, Silver Lake Partners and Microsoft short-changed shareholders, undervalued the company and benefited mainly Michael Dell.

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Cross Research analyst Shannon Cross said the move was just another step in Dell's commitment to examine alternative offers. But she said it "probably indicates Carl Icahn is serious about his proposal".

Icahn, whose arrival on the scene typically puts companies on guard, has said he wants the PC maker to pay $9 a share in dividends immediately from its own cash and from raising new debt.

He argued that, combined with a "stub" value of $13.81 per share that his firm calculated based on discounted cash flow, his proposal would deliver a total value of $22.81 per share.

That would be a 67 per cent premium to the $13.65 buyout price put forward by Michael Dell.

Reuters