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Fujitsu, Lenovo agree to PC merger

By AFP - Nov 02,2017 - Last updated at Nov 02,2017

A product of Lenovo is displayed during a news conference on the company’s annual results in Hong Kong on May 26, 2016 (Reuters photo)

TOKYO — Japan’s Fujitsu said on Thursday it had agreed to merge its struggling PC business with Lenovo, giving the Chinese computer giant a controlling share of the business.

Tokyo-based Fujitsu said it had “decided to formally sign a deal” with Lenovo, the world’s largest PC maker, and the government-backed Development Bank of Japan (DBJ) on a “strategic partnership” to develop and sell PCs.

Lenovo will hold 51 per cent of the shares in Fujitsu’s PC subsidiary, while the DBJ will hold 5 per cent, Fujitsu said in a statement.

The deal should allow Fujitsu to pour more resources into its profitable IT services operations, while also pushing ahead with a sweeping restructuring programme that will see 3,200 job cuts.

The decision came after Fujitsu said last month it was in talks with Lenovo over a potential deal, which pushed Fujitsu shares up by 7.8 per cent.

After the announcement however, Fujitsu shares were trading down 2.44 per cent at 874.1 yen.

The company had been in talks with Toshiba and Vaio to merge their once high-flying personal computer businesses, but those negotiations failed to result in a deal.

 

Once-mighty Japanese firms have struggled in the face of stiff competition from lower-cost rivals overseas, including in China and South Korea.

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