EU expected to clear Dell’s $67bn deal to buy EMC

Irish workforce look set to continue to play a significant role in both companies’ future

Dell employs about 2,500 people in Ireland, with EMC employing a similar amount, and VMWare having about 700 staff here
Dell employs about 2,500 people in Ireland, with EMC employing a similar amount, and VMWare having about 700 staff here

Dell, the world's third-biggest maker of computers, is set to gain unconditional EU antitrust approval for its $67 billion bid for data storage company EMC, two people familiar with the matter said late on Thursday.

Dell unveiled the deal in October last year, the largest ever in the technology industry sector, and designed to enable Dell to better challenge rivals Cisco Systems Inc, IBM and Hewlett-Packard in cloud computing, mobility and cyber security.

European Commission spokesman Ricardo Cardoso declined to comment on Thursday. The Commission is scheduled to give its ruling on the deal by February 29th.

“The transaction is on schedule under its original timetable and original terms,” a Dell spokesman said in a statement.

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EMC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

EMC shares closed 0.56 per cent higher at $25.12.

Dell founder and chief executive Michael Dell took the company private three years ago with the help of private equity firm Silver Lake.

The computer maker has arranged a debt package for up to $49.5 billion to help finance the EMC deal, the second-largest M&A financing on record.

Dell and EMC’s Irish workforce look set to continue to play a significant role in both companies’ future, with founder Michael Dell recently quashing suggestions that there would be mass job cuts if the merger goes through.

Dell employs about 2,500 people in Ireland, with EMC employing a similar amount, and its VMWare subsidiary having about 700 staff here.

Reuters