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Update: Red Hat to buy JBoss for at least $350M

Oracle had its eye on the open-source Java software vendor

April 10, 2006 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Red Hat Inc.'s planned purchase of JBoss Inc. will enable the Linux distribution company to more fully embrace service-oriented architecture (SOA) as well as expand its offerings of integrated software stacks, according to company executives. For its part, open-source middleware vendor JBoss will gain access to Red Hat's worldwide channels to extend its global reach.\

But one analyst warned that the tie-up may not prove as tidy as the combined companies hope, due to JBoss’ popularity with users of non-Red Hat platforms, especially Microsoft Corp.’s Windows Server.

Executives from Raleigh, N.C.-based Red Hat and Atlanta-based JBoss spoke during a conference call today about the surprise $350 million-plus acquisition, which, subject to regulatory approval, is due to close toward the end of May. In February, database and applications vendor Oracle Corp. was rumored to be in active discussions to purchase JBoss. The acquisition by Red Hat was announced this morning.

Although they didn't address the Oracle rumors, both the Red Hat and JBoss executives stressed corporate synergies and claimed that users and partners are keen to see a large, independent open-source firm.

"We chose the Red Hat option. I believe the companies sit well together," Marc Fleury, JBoss founder, chairman and CEO, said during the call. Fleury described Red Hat as the "big brother" to JBoss, in that the middleware vendor modeled its subscription and services business on the older Linux player.

JBoss, founded in 2001, will be an independent division of Red Hat, according to Fleury. He will report to Matthew Szulik, Red Hat chairman and CEO. “It was very important to me to know that I was taking this company into an environment that was conflict-free where there could be trust,” Fleury said.

The buyout offer, which is composed of 40% cash and 60% in Red Hat stock, could be sweetened by $70 million to a total of $420 million if JBoss meets certain financial targets.

Steve Walli, a vice president of strategy at Boston open-source consulting firm, Optaros Inc., said that while the purchase superficially “looks like a match made in heaven,” many internal issues need to be resolved.

“These are two very different companies,” Walli said. “Red Hat has been around for 11 years, a public company for 7 of them. They’ve got that quarter-on-quarter discipline. JBoss is, for all intents and purposes, still a startup.”

Walli also pointed out that JBoss has many customers that don’t run Red Hat or even Linux, which could complicate channel strategy. That reality was cemented last September when Microsoft Corp. and JBoss announced a partnership. Microsoft has its own application server, Internet Information Server, that is tightly integrated into its .Net platform. But during today's announcement, JBoss said that half of its customers run its Java Enterprise Middleware System (JEMS) with Windows Server.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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