Hewlett Packard Raises Concern Over Micro Focus Spin-Off

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NASDAQ:$HPE) saw a spin-off with Micro Focus International (LON:$MCRO), consequently raising concerns over reported inversion regulations. These regulations were set by the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) back in 2016.

According to a report from Bloomberg BNA, “The Micro Focus transaction is expected to violate an ownership rule in the regulation that applies if former shareholders of an acquired U.S. entity own 60% or more of the combined foreign acquiring entity, following an acquisition. Companies that surpass the 60% threshold are subject to adverse tax consequences.”

As a reference, in 2016, Pfizer (NASDAQ:$PFE) and Allergan (NASDAQ:$AGN) pulled out of their $160 billion merger due to anti-inversion rules.

The Spin-Off

HPE valued the spin-off and merger of its non-core software assets with Micro Focus at a cool $8.8 billion. The deal was targeted at HPE’s application delivery management, enterprise, security, big data, IT operations management, information management, and governance businesses. HPE was expected to own 50.1% of the combined entity, with the deal initially expected to close by September 2017.

In fiscal 2Q17, HPE’s software segment revenue fell 10% YoY, much to Micro Focus’s disappointment.

Fine Print

  • In the trailing-12-month period, HPE stock has risen 11%
  • In the past month, HPE stock has risen 2.7%
  • Since the start of 2017, HPE stock has risen 3.7% after rising more than 54% in 2016
  • Since its fiscal 2Q17 results released in May, HPE stock has fallen 4.4%

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About the author: Jennifer is a University of Western Ontario graduate with a degree in International Business. She strives to excel as a content creator in the digital sphere, working with clients in the Finance and Tech industry to leverage clickable taglines, images, and articles in driving traffic. When not writing, Jennifer enjoys photography, copywriting, and video production.