A sale of SecureWorks, in which Dell holds an 85% stake, would allow the latter to trim its $50 billion debt pile.
Computer
maker Dell
Technologies Inc is exploring a sale of SecureWorks Corp, a U.S.
provider of cybersecurity services with a market value of close to $2
billion, people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.
A
sale of SecureWorks, in which Dell holds an 85 percent stake, would
allow the latter to trim its $50 billion debt pile, after it decided
to become a publicly traded company last year through a complex deal
involving its software subsidiary VMware Inc.
SecureWorks
is working with investment bank Morgan
Stanley on a sale process for the entire company that is in its
early stages, the sources said, asking not to be identified because
the matter is confidential.
Dell
and SecureWorks declined to comment, while Morgan Stanley did not
respond to a request for comment.
SecureWorks,
based in Atlanta, offers information security solutions aimed at
protecting corporate networks from cyberattacks to 4,300 clients in
more than 50 countries, according to its website.
Dell
acquired SecureWorks for $612 million in 2011 and then floated the
company on the stock market in 2016. SecureWorks
shares are up 64 percent since then.
In
December, Dell became a publicly traded company following a $23.9
billion deal to buy back shares tied to its interest in VMware, which
it acquired when it bought buy data storage company EMC for $67
billion in 2016. EMC owned a majority stake in VMware.
Last
year, Dell decided to shun a traditional IPO route amid uncertainty
over how stock market investors would respond to its $50 billion debt
pile.
This
meant it would not receive any IPO proceeds that would have allowed
it to pay down debt.
Dell
founder Michael Dell has turned to dealmaking to transform his
company from a PC manufacturer into a broad seller of information
technology services, ranging from storage and servers to networking
and security.
Dell
has sold many of its non-core assets in the past. In 2016, for
example, it sold its software division to buyout firm Francisco
Partners and the private equity arm of activist hedge fund Elliott
Management Corp for more than $2 billion.
Elliott
increased its stake in Dell to about 5.6 percent earlier this month.
A source familiar with the matter said the hedge fund believes the
company's shares should be trading higher based on its ownership
stakes, including in SecureWorks. Elliott could not be reached for
comment.
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