HP
HP to acquire cloud startup Eucalyptus Software
Hewlett-Packard
Co plans to buy cloud software startup Eucalyptus Software, a rare
acquisition for the company since its failed $11 billion purchase of
Britain's Autonomy Plc in 2011.
HP did not say how much it will
pay for Eucalyptus, which provides open-source software for building
private and hybrid clouds, or internet-based computing services. A
source familiar with the deal told Reuters that HP would pay less than
$100 million. Tech blog Re/code first reported the price tag earlier on
Thursday.
The acquisition is expected to close in the fiscal
fourth quarter, after which Eucalyptus chief executive officer Marten
Mickos, a proponent of open-sourced software, will join HP as senior
vice president and head of its cloud business.
He will report
to CEO Meg Whitman. Among his duties will be building HP's "Helion"
cloud computing services, the company said on Thursday.
Martin
Fink, who now leads the cloud business, will remain chief technology
officer as well as director of HP Labs, which focuses on researching
next-generation products.
HP, once the world's largest PC maker
but now trying to become a leading provider of hardware and software to
corporate and government clients, was forced to write down much of
Autonomy after the company said it discovered serious accounting
irregularities.
It ended the July 2014 quarter with $4.9
billion in operating company net cash. In August, Whitman told analysts
HP was in a position to make acquisitions if needed, though it remains
committed to returning half its cash to shareholders.
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