Acquisition of Samsung HDD by Seagate Completed
On 19 December 2011
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on December 7, 2011 at 2:56 pmSamsung Electronics Co. Ltd. announced that the sale of the HDD division of Samsung to Seagate Technology plc is under way and will be completed on 19 December 2011.
Upon the completion of the sale process, Seagate Technology will take over all outstanding warranties and services and the homepage and the call center of Samsung HDD will be linked to those of Seagate.
Due to the transition process, Samsung will stop issuing the numbers for RMA (Return Material Authorization) from 5 December, 2011.
Comments
Samsung entered into HDDs around twenty years ago to fill its own
computers but also to sell them to outside customers. Probably never
profitable in this activity, it also never was a power here, being now
the smallest manufacturer with market share between 7% to 8% or
roughly 13 million units per quarter, behind WD, Seagate, Hitachi GST and
Toshiba, and in front of tiny Chinese ExcelStor.
The company has a small plant in Gumi, South Korea, the bulk of its HDDs
being assembled by subcontractor SAE/TDK in Donguan, China. All the
components come from outside firms, including Showa Denko and Fuji
Electrics for disk platters and SAE/TDK for heads.
Samsung doesn't not produce enterprise HDDs, only 3.5-inch desktop,
2.5-inch laptop devices and a very small number of 1.8-inch units. Its
strongest position is now in notebook HDDS being produced in quantities
twice more than 3.5-inch devices. The Korean firm also designs and sells
external 2.5-inch (M2) and 3.5-inch (M3) hard drives (M3) with USB 2.0
and 3.0 interfaces.
The jewel in Seagate's basket is the internal SpinPoint M8 at 500GB
per disk to get 1TB notebook units in standard 9.5mm height. Toshiba and
WD already launched the same units, but Hitachi GST and Seagate are
late in technology for this product to be the flagship one of the
industry in 2012.
Concentrating now on flash memories only for storage, Samsung is selling
its HDD business to Seagate after getting approval of regulatory bodies
for $1,375 million, including $687.5 million in cash, the difference
being in share transaction, Samsung getting a 9.6% equity and a seat on
Seagate's board. The two companies also sign a supply agreement: Samsung
will provide Seagate with flash products for use in enterprise SSDs and
hybrid drives; Seagate will supply HDDs to Samsung for PCs, notebooks
and CE devices.
Seagate has not released official information concerning the integration
of Samsung HDD business but StorageNewsLetter.com got some of them from
French Jean-Louis Cazenave at Seagate since 1997 and promoted in 2008
executive sales director for South & East Europe and Global Accounts
and continuing as managing director of the French office: "We will keep
their line of notebook drives, especially their M8, currently in
production and at 500GB per platter. We have 500GB on only two platters.
We will continue also the M7, its small brother, for three to six
months. But we are leaving aside their 3.5-inch HDDs."
"We will keep a strong autonomy of their activity", he added. "But they
have currently the same difficulties to get their components."