Why Dell Went Private, and What It Means

Updated

Dell officially announced its plans to go private this week, finally setting the rumors to rest. While the news comes as no surprise to frequent Foolish readers, it is still a monumental event for the tech world. After all, Dell was one of the hottest stocks to have during the '90s, and eight years ago or so, no one could have predicted that the "Dude, you're getting a Dell" guy would ever go away. Should this news be seen as an omen for the rest of the computer industry, or is it just a move befitting founder Michael Dell's private personality?

The buyout details
The Dell deal has become the largest buyout deal since the 2008 U.S. financial crisis. As Motley Fool's Investor Beat detailed the other day, it is an intricately layered beast. In total, the whole thing cost approximately $24.5 billion, and included money from investment banks, private equity firms, and even a $2 billion loan from peer Microsoft .

The why behind it
The plainest way to rationalize the Dell buyout is that the company is gradually transitioning from being a computer company to a distributor of enterprise systems and services. Of course, such a drastic makeover would make the company unrecognizable to its investors, which could cause shareholder morale to sour and send an already low stock on an even longer drop. In going private now, Dell can change itself however it sees fit, and use the buyout money as a more dependable buffer.


It's not that Michael Dell has suddenly developed a huge passion for servers. Several macro-economic factors are in play here, too, like the decay of the PC industry. Even Microsoft has been struggling with lackluster sales of Windows 8. Its loan to Dell may be an effort of good faith, to support the company as it changes, and perhaps benefit from its potential success. Sometimes the situation calls to either adapt or get out of the way, and Dell seems to be making a move for the former, just not under the watchful eyes of Wall Street.

Wall Street's reaction
One of its former powerhouses may be dropping off the radar, but that doesn't mean the market is grieving. As fellow Fool contributor Jeremy Bowman explained, the Dow Jones Industrial Average bounced back a full 99 points on the day of the Dell announcement, with the more tech-centric Nasdaq rising 1.3%. Dell's shares also enjoyed a 1% gain that same day.

Foolish finale
Does this enthusiasm from Wall Street mean that the tech industry is happy to see its titans go private? Not necessarily. Dell's move could signify the beginning of the end for the computer market, but the jolt in stock market morale may be a sign of hope that the industry's former heavyweights can adapt with the changing times.

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The article Why Dell Went Private, and What It Means originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Caroline Bennett has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Microsoft. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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