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Micron Electronics to exit PC business
http://news.excite.com/news/zd/010323/10/micron-electronics-to

Updated 10:32 AM ET March 23, 2001
by Margaret Kane, Inter@ctive Investor

In a $130 million stock deal, Micron will merge with Interland
and become a Web-hosting firm. The company plans to sell its
Micronpc.com business.

Micron Electronics said Friday it is exiting the PC business
and merging with Web hosting company Interland in a $130 million
stock deal that will transform the company into a hosting firm.

The all-stock deal will combine Micron’s HostPro Web hosting
subsidiary with Interland, creating a new firm that will use the
Interland name. Interland stockholders will own 30 percent of
the new company. Interland went public in July.

Micron had been scheduled to release its second-quarter
earnings today. Wall Street analysts were expecting the company
to report net income of 2 cents per share.

The company said today that it plans to sell its Micronpc.com
business, which makes PCs, to a private technology-equity
investment firm. Financial terms of that deal were not released.
The company will also sell its SpekTek division, which sells
refurbished random access memory, to parent company Micron
Technology. Earlier this week, Micron Technology delayed its
earnings release because of the changes at Micron Electronics,
which is majority owned by Micron Technology.

The new combined firm is expected to post pro forma revenues
for fiscal 2002 of $160 million to $180 million, and save $20
million to $30 million in the first year through synergies. The
company also predicted reaching a break-even earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) by the
second quarter of 2002, with positive cash flow three quarters
later.

Micron CEO Joel Kocher will become chairman and CEO of the new
firm, while Interland CEO Ken Gavranovic will be vice chairman.

"Hosting will serve as the foundation for many opportunities as
SMEs (small and medium enterprises) increasingly outsource IT.
This merger strategically positions us to take advantage of all
the aspects of the Third Wave of computing, as the real power of
computing moves from the desktop to the network,” Kocher said.

The new company will have headquarters in Atlanta, with six
data centers, 112,000 customers, and more than 227,000 hosted
Web sites.

The HostPro division was Micron’s smallest, but it has
delivered strong growth. In the first quarter, that division
posted revenues of $14 million, up 19 percent compared to the
fourth quarter of 2000. In recent interviews, Kocher said he had
high hopes for HostPro, which was funded largely by profits from
SpecTek.

Despite the growth at HostPro, Micron's MicronPC.com business
and SpekTek business still accounted for 97 percent of revenues
during the first quarter.

Third-largest direct PC vendorIt's not hard to understand why
Micron would want to exit the PC business. The company was the
third-largest direct PC vendor behind Dell Computer and Gateway,
but has had trouble turning a profit. Recently, Compaq, Dell and
Hewlett-Packard issued warnings for their upcoming quarters.

Analysts had expected Micron to exit the PC business at some
point. Merrill Lynch recently lowered its prediction for PC unit
growth to 12.5 percent from 15.4 percent. Research firm IDC put
U.S. PC growth in the fourth quarter at 0.3 percent year over
year, down 3.6 percent from a quarter earlier.

The SpekTek sale will also include certain real estate assets
and intellectual property. After paying off existing SpekTek
profit-sharing obligations, the deal will give Micron
Electronics $42 million. The assets will be transferred April 6.

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