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HP favoring PC business spin-off over sale

Hewlett-Packard revealed on Monday that the preferred strategic option for its struggling PC business is to spin it off into a separate company.

The world's largest PC maker made a surprise announcement earlier in August that it was considering "a range of options" for its PC unit, including a spin-off or sale. The company has been criticized for announcing its intentions without any clear plan of action.

But, a company spokeswoman on Monday gave a stronger indication of HP's next steps for its Personal Systems Group (PSG), Reuters reports.

"We prefer a spin-off as a separate company and the working hypotheses is that a spin-off will be in the best interests of HP's shareholders, customers and employees," she said. "However, we have to complete the diligence process and validate this assumption, including fully understanding the dis-synergies in separating the PSG business from HP."

HP said a final decision is expected by the end of the year. The full process of a spin-off or sale could take 12 to 18 months. The company is undergoing a radical transition, having axed development on webOS devices. It has also announced a more than $10 billion deal to buy Autonomy Corporation, a move that CEO Léo Apotheker says will help establish HP as a software and services giant similar to IBM.

Though HP leads the PC market in terms of volume, it has struggled to maintain healthy operating margins, which currently stand at just 5.7 percent, for the unit. Rival Apple is said to make more profit from selling one Mac than HP does with seven PCs.

According to one study, Apple has taken the top spot in the global market for mobile PCs, which include notebooks and tablets. The iPad maker holds a 21.1 percent share, compared to HP's 15 percent.

However, HP may see its mobile PC share rise after a $99 fire sale on the discontinued TouchPad allowed it to sell off its overstock, which reportedly numbered in the hundreds of thousands. After selling as little as 10 percent of their stock, retailers were said to have complained to HP about excess TouchPad inventory. The company has revealed that it has taken a $100 million charge because of poor sell through of the TouchPad, as well as a $1 billion write-off on its webOS hardware business.

HP TouchPad clearance

Shares of the company rose $1.30 to $26.12, up 5.24 percent on Monday. The day after HP's announcement on Aug. 18, its stock plummeted 20 percent, recovering slightly since then.



28 Comments

mdriftmeyer 20 Years · 7395 comments

The first brilliant decision following the wise decision to cancel their tablet run. Spinning off the PC Business into a subsidiary should have happened a decade prior.

pooman625 13 Years · 52 comments

omg...hp sold hundreds of thousands of hp touchpads. No offense, but thats not even impressive on a $499 tablet not to mention a $99 one. Either way, it hasnt been the most successful company in the previous weeks... losing about $100 on each of those touchpads...

mcarling 17 Years · 1099 comments

Essentially, HP would be undoing the Compaq merger. It was always a stupid idea to merge HP and Compaq because HP always had a high quality, high price, high margin, moderate volume corporate culture while Compaq always had a moderate quality, moderate price, low margin, high volume corporate culture. It was doomed to be the mother of all corporate culture clashes from the beginning.

I suggest HP call the spin-off Compaq. I expect HP still have all the rights to the name.

island hermit 14 Years · 6214 comments

A spinoff wins over a sale?!

I predict the death of the spinoff within 3 years.

sailorpaul 14 Years · 305 comments

"...dis-synergies"

Yep. That's why those spokespersons are paid the moderately big bucks.