Western Digital Objects Plans for Toshiba Chip Business Sale

Western Digital Objects Plans for Toshiba Chip Business Sale
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Toshiba’s plans to sell its memory chip business to raise much-needed cash hit a snag as joint-venture partner Western Digital said the sale may violate the companies’ contract, according to Bloomberg.

Western Digital CEO Steve Milligan wrote a letter to Toshiba’s board members advising them that they should negotiate exclusively with his company before any sale. He also argued that the rumored bidders were unsuitable and the reported prices offered were above the fair and supportable value of the chip business. Toshiba and Western Digital are joint owners of certain chip business facilities.

Western Digital’s contentions may add another potential roadblock to the troubled process of finding a buyer for Toshiba’s chip unit. The Japanese company needs cash to help shore up finances hurt by losses from its Westinghouse nuclear business and has warned that its very survival is at risk. Analysts cautioned that Western Digital does have legal rights that will bear on the sale process. Toshiba disagrees that a sale would violate the agreement.

The U.S. company, one of the largest makers of computer hard drives, last year made a $15.8 billion bet on technology that’s making its core business obsolete, with its purchase of SanDisk. SanDisk was a manufacturing partner of Toshiba, a role that Western Digital has assumed.

That purchase piled debt onto its balance sheet and may restrict its ability to match some of the bids that other company’s have reportedly made for Toshiba’s chip unit. In January, Western Digital said it had cash and cash equivalents of $5.2 billion. The company had “liquidity available“ totaling $6.2 billion and a net debt position of about $800 million, it said.

Toshiba is in the midst of an auction for the chips business and has narrowed the original group of contenders after a first round of bidding. Taiwan’s Hon Hai has indicated it’s willingness to pay as much as 3 trillion yen ($27 billion) for the business.

Toshiba’s board is trying to balance the need for a quick sale with concerns that such a deal would mark the end of Japan’s chance of restoring its once-leading role in the $300 billion chip industry and potentially aid China’s push to enter that important market. Milligan’s letter cautioned in particular against accepting a bid from Broadcom, a company that has led the wave of consolidation in the chip industry over the last two years.