BUSINESSThe Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 5, 2001-7A *Hewlett-Packard buying Compaq for $25 billion Deal would allow merged companies to surpass industry leader Dell Computer Corp. SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - High-tech giant Hewlett-Packard Co. is buying Compaq Com- puter Corp. for about $25 billion in a block- buster merger bringing together two rivals struggling to survive in the battered computer industry. The stock swap announced Monday night creates a behemoth that currently has 150,000 employees and $87 billion in revenue - about the size of IBM Corp. - with products not only in the personal computer business but also in computer servers, printers and high- tech services. Both Palo Alto, Calif.-based HP and Hous- ton-based Compaq have been hurt by technol- ogy sector downturns in the past year and each company imposed layoffs to deal with shrink- ing profits. Another 15,000 jobs will be cut as the com- panies combine, lowering the eventual total work force to 135,000, Compaq chief execu- tive and chairman Michael Capellas said at a meeting with analysts. Compaq and HP are Nos. 2 and 4 in world- wide PC sales, but their combined total would surpass leader Dell Computer Corp., accord- ing to the most recent figures from Gartner Dataquest. Compaq ranks first in worldwide server sales, while HP is fourth. "This is a decisive move that accelerates our strategy and positions us to win by offering even greater value to our customers and part- ners;' said HP's chairman and chief executive, Carly Fiorina, who will keep those posts at the merged company. The company will still be called Hewlett- Packard and will keep its headquarters in Palo Alto, though it will have a substantial presence in Houston. Capellas will be president. The merger is subject to approval by share- holders and regulators, and European antitrust authorities are also expected to examine the impact of the proposed deal. Once the merger closes, which is expected to happen in the first half of 2002, the new HP will be 64 percent owned by HP shareholders and 36 percent owned by Compaq sharehold- ers. Capellas and four other Compaq directors will join HP's board. "It's an extremely strong match for both firms, particularly at the executive level with Fiorina and Capellas," said analyst Rob Ender- le of Giga Information Group. "She's more of the charismatic visionary, he's more of the operations person. The two of them together should be able to take the combined firm places they couldn't go separately." Investors were not impressed. In early after- noon trading, shares of Compaq were down 46 cents to $11.89, about 75 percent from its peak in early 1999. Shares of Hewlett-Packard were off $3.26 to $19.95, more than 70 percent off its high last summer. HP and Compaq said the deal would save them $2 billion a year by 2003, but Gartner Dataquest research fellow Martin Reynolds said that won't be easy. Both companies, he said, have long product lines that customers will not want to see phased out. The deal comes as the computer industry suffers through declining sales - a trend blamed on a saturated market and the slump- ing worldwide economy. Compaq lost $279 "This is a decisive move that accelerates our strategy and positions us to win by offering even greater value to our customers and partners." - Carly Fiorona Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Officer million in the most recent quarter; HP posted a net profit of $111 million in its last quarter, but that marked an 89 percent decline from the previous year. In June, Capellas outlined a broad reorgani- zation plan bringing Compaq's services divi- sion into the forefront in the company's work. Hewlett-Packard has moved in a similar direction under Fiorina, who has brought about a broad reorganization of the 63-year- old Silicon Valley institution since taking over in 1999. Fiorina, who majored in philosophy and medieval history at Stanford University and once worked as shipping clerk at the com- pany she now heads, has come under intense criticism in recent months for repeatedly low- ering her forecasts for Wall Street. Some analysts have suggested that HP get out of the PC business, which was a money- loser for the company in the last quarter. Compaq was founded in 1982 by three exec- utives who left Texas Instruments: Rod Can- ion, Jim Harris and Bill Murto. They sketched; their first product - a portable PC that could run the same software as IBM's new PC - on a paper placemat in a Houston pie shop before presenting it to venture capitalists. Hewlett-Packard came out of similarly hum- ble origins, it was launched in a Palo Alto garage in 1938 by the late William Hewlett and David Packard with $538 of their own money. I -. Report indicates economy may be about to rebound D.nani s:;:ssc y cac; rwfl.z :sw a L : ~: ri'a x ; :as; ;; :: ";;>5 :::: r I:::7a .,r: . ..:d?' '!W shi: ",::i±:: NEW YORK (AP) - For months, the struggling manufacturing sector has dragged down the U.S. economy, but new evidence surfaced yesterday indicating the burden may finally be easing. The National Association of Pur- chasing Management reported that manufacturing declined for the 13th consecutive month in August, but at a much slower rate - a strong sign that an economic turnaround may be near. The association said its index of business activity rose to 47.9 from 43.6 in July, much better than the 44.0 analysts had been expecting. An index above 50 signifies growth in manufacturing, while a figure below 50 shows contraction. Analysts labeled the report encour- aging and said it points toward a recovery that could keep the broader economy out of a recession. "This is potentially the turning point * for the manufacturing sector," said David Orr, chief economist for Wachovia Corp. in Charlotte, N.C. Stocks moved sharply higher on the news. The Dow Jones industrial aver- age finished up 47.74 points to 9,997.49, while the Nasdaq composite index finished down 34.65 points to 1,770.78. The survey outweighed a report from the Commerce Department that construction edged down in July, the fifth monthly decline in a row, as spending for home improvements fell sharply. Spending for all build- ing projects slipped by 0.1 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $859.4 billion, the govern- ment said. The nation's economy barely grew in the second quarter, expanding at a rate ofjust 0.2 percent. Orr said the most encouraging development in yesterday's survey was a rise in new orders, to 53.1 from 46.3 in July. "In the past when the new orders index has moed above 50 ... that has been a reliable indicator that the worst is over," he said. In addition, indexes measuring pro- duction and new export orders moved into growth territory. Backlogs of orders, inventories, employment and imports all continued to show contrac- tion, but at slower rates. The index is based on a survey of purchasing executives who buy the raw materials for manufacturing at more than 350 companies. .. .. . ..- . .. .. . .rr .. "Y 11 , ' a ' ' Shaman Drum Bookshop Mon-Sat 10AM-10PM Sun 12-6PM 311-315 S. State St 734.662.7407 textbooks@shamandrum.com Shop With Us. We're. You. s " " s s shamandrum.com site opens for textbook sales 10am September 3rd tft*W * secure on-line ordering * pick up your order in 24 hours *------------------------------------..--------.------.-.- .Expedition may have stabilizer bar defect WASHINGTON (AP) - The gov- ernment is investigating a possible defect in the Ford Expedition's suspen- sion system, the same problem that led to a recall of the Ford Explorer and Mercury Mountaineer last winter. The National Highway Traffic Safe- ty Administration has received 14 complaints of failure of the front stabi- lizer bar links in 1997 and 1998 Expe- ditions. The agency estimates about 437,000 of the vehicles are on the road. The stabilizer bar connects the left and right front wheel control arms and helps control the pitch of the vehicle in turns. Ford recalled 876,413 Explorers and Mercury Mountaineers in December to replace the stabilizer bar links. Ford spokesman Mike Vaughn said the company is cooperating with NHTSA's investigation into the Expe- dition, but it is too early to speculate on the outcome. NHTSA opens any investigation with a preliminary evaluation, in which the automaker and the agency exchange paperwork. That is the stage *of the Expedition investigation, which was openel in July and was divulged in the monthly investigation report NHTSA released yesterday. The agency can upgrade the investi- gation into an engineering analysis, where parts are examined for defects. Investigations can lead to a recall, but many are dropped. NHTSA closed two other investiga- tions into popular Ford vehicles after the automaker agreed to a recall, according to the monthly report. Ford is recalling 275,167 Windstar minivans because a front coil spring can fracture, due to corrosion. Ninety- three owners told Ford the fractured spring punctured a tire, but no acci- dents or injuries were reported. The Windstar recall covers only 1997-1998 models registered in north- ern states and Canadian provinces that use a lot of salt on the road. Nearly 200,000 of the recalled vehicles are in the United States. Ford is also offering an extended warranty for the problerp on all 1995- 1998 Windstars. The warranty is for, 10 years and unlimited mileage. Ford also recalled 1996-1998 mod-, els of the Contour and Mercury Mys- tique and 1999 models of the Cougar because of fire risks in the heaters. N1 ~ ~" .. r:............................"."...i. ..4.r.:.r."... ..: "". .. . . ..... .....yr t. . . . . . ........................... PtB {etcbcr-9 20 -? - ~ C r ~that we were,,ll playing. r -ar.e r t rt titme .:. +.. .~t "'.. .. ." "t t }} wwgr#w4 givy . 1W14)van Disney opens new theme park in Japan *to rain, huge crowds TOKYO (AP) - DisneySea opened its doors yesterday to more than 15,000 people who braved each other in a Tokyo suburb. In contrast to the United States, where theme parks are slashing flrices to wouusi 1tome~rs dirino' an