The two men who founded BlackBerry Ltd.Silicone Phone Case say
they may bid for the 92 percent of the struggling Canadian smartphone
maker they don't already own.Co-founder Mike Lazaridis, who was forced
out as co-chief executive officer and vice chairman in January 2012, and
Douglas Fregin, vice president for operations until 2007, said in a
regulatory filing they hired Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs
Group Inc. and independent private equity investment firm Centerview
Partners LLC as advisers."In light of [BlackBerry's] recent announcement
that its board of directors has formed a special committee to explore
strategic alternatives to enhance value and increase scale, the
reporting persons are considering all available options with respect to
their holdings of the shares, including, without limitation, a potential
acquisition of all the outstanding shares of the issuer that they do
not currently own, either by themselves or with other interested
investors," the men said in a regulatory filing with the U.S.modern lamps Securities
and Exchange Commission.Their filing comes amid increasing corporate
interest in the company, which last month reported a nearly $1 billion
quarterly loss and said it would slash 40 percent of its workforce after
consumers largely rejected BlackBerry's new smartphones that were
supposed to revitalize the smartphone pioneer.
BlackBerry was
betting the devices would help it catch up with Apple Inc.'s iPhone and
phones running on Google Inc.'s Android software.Fairfax Investment
Holdings Ltd. made a conditional, non-binding offer last month to take
the company private by buying the 90 percent of BlackBerry shares it
does not own for $9 each. The bid values the company at about $4.7
billion.But investors and analysts are unconvinced Fairfax will be able
to finance the offer, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times
reported.Lazaridis and Fregin aren't working with Fairfax, at least for
now, people close to the matter told the newspapers.Cerberus Capital
Management LP, a private-equity firm known for investing in distressed
companies,koyo bearing has
asked for a non-disclosure agreement so it can get access to
BlackBerry's confidential financial information ahead of a possible bid,
those newspapers and the Financial Times said.High Quality PET protective film Products From ChinaIn addition, technology giants,kapton tape including
Google Inc., Cisco Systems Inc. and German software company SAP AG, are
reported eyeing BlackBerry or parts of the business or its assets,
Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail said.It's not clear if any of
these companies will bid.Lazaridis and Fregin, who own a company that
invests in quantum computing technology, had no immediate comment.
BlackBerry declined to comment.The two men, who have known each other
since fifth grade, founded Research In Motion Ltd. in 1984, originally
making bar code technology for film. The company, which introduced the
first BlackBerry smartphone in 2000, changed its name to BlackBerry
earlier this year.
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