Tag: tech data

Apollo ups Tech Data bid

Apollo has upped its bid for Tech Data to $6 billion after an unnamed firm made a late bid for the outfit.

Tech Data shareholders accepted a $5.4 billion bid for the firm earlier this month, but it has been revealed that a second, more attractive bid was then received.

Apollo responded quickly, upping its bid to $6 billion, which has now been accepted.

Tech Data said: “The Tech Data board of directors has unanimously approved the amendment and recommends that Tech Data shareholders vote in favour of the transaction.”

The distributor said the rival bid came during a “go-shop” period, which was an agreement as part of Apollo’s initial bid, inviting other parties to propose a takeover.

 

Tech Data does well, but worried about Brexit

Tech Data has been doing reasonably well but is seeing some dark clouds on the horizon over the thinks like Trade Wars and Brexit.

The distie delivered a two percent increase in net sales to $9.1 billion year-on-year and net income improved by four percent to $79.3 million. The performance in Europe was down year on year with net sales falling by two percent to $4.4 billion, and as a percentage of worldwide sales, the region dropped from 51 percent to 49 cash flow. The firm reported that servers, software, networking, and PCs, along with security, were the segments that appealed to customers.

Tech Data’s Euro revenues slide and fall

Tech Data’s European revenues tumbled the first quarter and CEO Rich Hume expects things to get worse this year.

Tech Data was doing well worldwide and Europe was the only region to under perform. Revenues in Europe slumped by eight percent year on year to $4.3 billion.

Across the pond the Americas segment was meanwhile elevated by a five percent year on year revenue boost to $3.8 billion, while Asia Pacific sales jumped by 15 percent to $310 million.

Tech Data gets Intouch

Tech Data has introduced sponsored product search and targeted banner advertising to its online sales platform InTouch using digital advertising system provider Citrus .

The enhancements to InTouch will allow Tech Data to provide a more personalised user experience for customers across its European footprint and improved visibility of return on investment for vendors’ digital marketing activities, enabled by Citrus’s advanced data analytics and machine learning capability.

Nutanix spruces up channel charter

Cloud outfit Nutanix announced today that it is enhancing its channel charter which it calls Power to the Partner.

The idea is to extend opportunities to value-added distributors (VAD) and global systems integrators (GSI) along with additional opportunities for resellers. The new updates provide benefits to partners across the industry.

Tech Data reports revenue boost

Tech Data has reported revenue increases across all its geographic regions.

The company said that for the last three-quarters sales climbed 11 percent year on year to $9.3 billion while operating income was up 85 percent to $146.9 million.

Europe made up over half of the overall sales (53 percent) at $4.9 billion.

Tech Data CEO Rich Hume said: “I am pleased to

Rich Hume to take over at Tech Data

Rich-HumeA former IBM partner chief and current COO  has secured the top job at Tech Data as current CEO Bob Dutkowsky cleans out his desk after nearly a decade at the top of the outfit.

Rich Hume will assume the CEO post on 6 June 2018, as Dutkowsky steps back to the role of executive chairman of the board.

Tech Data billed the announcement as the “culmination of the board’s leadership succession plan that capitalises on the strength of the Tech Data management team”.

Hume joined Tech Data in 2016, after 30-years at Biggish Blue including stints as GM of Global Business Partners and GM for Europe.

Tech Data needs a bit of a rethink after its disappointing Q4 results. It had been doing well up to that point with its annual revenues last year up  40 percent to $36.8 billion following its acquisition of rival Avnet Technology Solutions.

Charles Adair, lead independent director of the Tech Data Board, said: “Today’s announcement is the result of a thorough and thoughtful long-range leadership succession planning process undertaken by the board over the past several years.

“The board is confident that our plan provides a natural progression for Tech Data to continue to grow and thrive. Since joining the company in 2016, Rich has been a critical member of our executive team and has proven himself a strong leader with extensive industry experience and operational expertise. Importantly, having served as COO, Rich is intimately familiar with Tech Data’s business operations, and we are confident that he is the ideal candidate to succeed Bob as CEO.

“We are also thrilled that the company will continue to benefit from Bob’s wealth of experience and strategic guidance as he transitions to his new role as executive chairman of the board.”

 

 

Infinigate announces new CEO

csm_klaus_schlichterle_8886a69bbeInfinigate has announced that Tech Data’s former head of German operations, Klaus Schlichtherle, has become its CEO.

Schlichtherle is replacing founder David Martinez who will be cleaning out his desk in April and become president of the board.

Martinez said that Schlichtherle was the right chap to drive Infinigate’s goal to grow from a €400 million to €1 billion company in the next five years.

“We are very happy to have won an internationally experienced manager such as Klaus Schlichtherle”, Martinez said.

“Infinigate will face another high-growth period with further international expansion and Klaus Schlichtherle brings along the required experience to manage this challenge”.

Infinigate obtained much of its growth through acquisitions. Last month it wrote a cheque for Dutch security outfit VAD Crypsys.

Klaus Schlichtherle added: “Infinigate is a strongly growing company in the IT Security sector and I am very much looking forward in taking over this exciting task of further expanding and developing the group.”

Infinigate claims to now cover “close to 80 percent of the western European IT security market’s potential”, having operations in 20 countries.

Tech Data’s shares crash

Tech Data’s shares Wall Street Crash, Wikimedia Commonscrashed after its numbers failed to impress analysts and it complained of missing vendor rebate targets.

For those who came in late, Tech Data’s moves to buy out Avnet Technology Solutions received the thumbs up from Wall Street, with its share price rising 27 percent for the year to date.

But now its market value has dropped 19 percent as the company missed its quarterly profit targets and disappointed Wall Street with its guidance.

This is Tech Data’s first full quarter since it sealed the Avnet mega-merger in February, and the deal has made it even bigger than everyone expected, with Q2 revenues surging 40 percent annually to $8.9 billion.  Growth in both Europe and the Americas was in the low single digits.

Avnet TS has also breathed fresh life into Tech Data’s margins. Gross margins hit 5.8 percent for the quarter, up from 4.98 percent a year earlier, as the more enterprise-focused Avnet business made its margin-enriching presence felt.

But Tech Data’s gross margins and earnings should have been even higher than this.  The outfit blamed the shortfall on execution issues, increased competition and a fall in rebates from some of its key vendor partners.

Despite this, Tech Data’s shares are still up by about five percent for the year to date as CEO Robert Dutkowsky argued that the giant is a “stronger and more complex company today than it was a year ago”.

A “significant piece” of the shortfall was generated by Tech Data missing its vendor rebate targets, Dutkowsky revealed on a Q2 earnings call.

Dutkowsky pointed the finger at Avnet’s biggest vendors when he said that the problem lies mainly with “a few very large vendors”… “and these are not vendors that we have had a long history of managing at the volume and scale and scope that we had to manage through this quarter”.

During Q2, only Apple (12 percent), HP Inc (11 percent) and Cisco (11 percent) generated over 10 per cent of Tech Data’s sales, but it inherited a big relationship with IBM through the Avnet union.

Dutkowsky said that a relatively small sales shortfall in technologies it carries in its newly enlarged datacentre arm can result in it missing margin-rich rebates, due to the project-based nature of the business.

A number of vendors on this side of its business changed their rebate programmes during the quarter, affecting its profitability, he indicated. To make matters worse, several major vendors didn’t grow at the rate they planned during the quarter, Dutkowsky added, making it even harder to hit rebate targets that were assigned based on projected growth.

“We’re learning to manage the challenges and the complexities and that’s why we can say that that fits into that category of execution, and we know we can execute better in this area and we will,” he said on the call.

US outfits controls a third of European IT distribution

Beancounters at Bain and Company have discovered that US distributors Iuseurope-1024x640 control a third of IT distribution.

The study conducted on behalf of the Technology Channels Alliance (TCA), said the IT distribution was worth €69 billion 2015/2016 in the eight biggest European economies. US-based giants have a 35 percent share across these markets.

TCA chief executive Robert Norum said that the findings pour cold water on expectations given recent market consolidation and the perception that distribution is becoming a global game.

He said that 60 to 65 percent of all distribution is actually carried out by local and regional players which would concern the big three who think they have everything sewn up when the market is a lot more fragmented than most people would think.

Total European IT and CE distribution revenues across the eight markets rose two per cent to €69bn in 2015/16, with growth driven by mobility, printing, and the IT value segment, the study found.

That figure accounts for 37 percent of end-user spending of €189bn in those countries, or 42 percent when reseller margins are factored in, which would mean that over two-fifths of IT and CE revenue travels through the two-tier channel in Europe.

The percentage share of the end-user market intermediated by distributors in the UK leapt from 40 to 43 percent year-on-year last year, the research found, thanks in part to Apple’s decision to shift some sales to distribution here.

The percentage shares for Italy, Spain and Switzerland also rose, from 48 to 49 percent, 47 to 48 percent and 42 to 44 percent, respectively.

Wholesalers’ share for desktops and notebooks, for instance, rose from 57 to 59 percent and 65 to 69 percent, respectively. This was attributed partly to Lenovo, and potentially also Dell, shifting more sales to a two-tier model.

Bain said that the channels help in the new key technology drivers – cyber-security, hyperconverged infrastructure and the Internet of Things (IoT).

“Vendors need help working out how to get these products to market, and resellers need help working out how to sell them. Distribution is less of a box-shifter model and more of a value-add one.”

Distributors’ profitability, however, is on the decrease, the research found, with the average margin of a ‘traditional’ broad liner getting just one percent and the value player getting three-to-four percent.

Microsoft carries out partner review

Stefan_Lochner_-_Last_Judgement_-_circa_1435Software King of the World, Microsoft, is auditing its partners and sorting out the sheep from the goatees.

Request for proposals (RFPs) were sent out to existing and new distributors last Friday covering much of the software Microsoft puts through distribution especially its full packaged products (FPP), OEM Windows, OEM server and electronic software delivery (ESD) products.

At the moment, Vole uses Tech Data, Ingram, Westcoast, Exertis and Entatech but now it is thought that Microsoft wants its distributors to reflect its recent move into hardware and changes to its business model.

VIP and Ci Distribution have received an invite to bid which could suggest a widening of the distribution channel, or that some big names might be culled.

Ingram and Tech Data recently lost out in a similar review Microsoft completed for its hardware accessories business, which includes mice and keyboards. In that case there were seven distributors were invited to bid for this franchise but only Exertis and Westcoast were successful.

Avnet and Ingram see sales fall

avnettsJust as Ingram is about to be bought, HNA and Avnet gears up to sell TS unit to Tech Data, both outfits are seeing their sales slide.

It is no big news, both Avnet and Ingram Micro have seen several quarters of sales doom as they start their M&A activity.

Ingram’s Q3, which ended 1 October, net profits jumped 21 per cent annually to $78.5m (£64.4m) on sales which were down three per cent over the same period to $10.2 billion.  Ingram is becoming part of the Chinese giant HNA. It did not hold a Q3 earnings call or provide a financial outlook for that reason.

Tts CEO Alain Monié did say the third quarter had been seen “robust improvement in gross and operating margins.”

“We see further stabilisation in market demand across most of the globe and our teams continue to leverage our investments in productivity and services to deliver improved bottom-line results and growth in a number of areas as we benefit from the broadest solutions portfolio and widest geographic reach in the industry,” he added.

Avnet is trying to sell its Technology Solutions arm to Tech Data. For the combined business, including TS, net profit fell 47.1 per cent annually to $68.8m, on sales which slumped 13 per cent over the same period to $6bn.

This means that TS performed “below expectations”, with sales falling 21.2 per cent annually to $1.87bn.

CEO William Ameilo said Avnet’s future without TS looks bright.

“In summary, the sale of TS allows us to focus on electronic components business, to which we just added unique capability with the acquisition of Premier Farnell while providing significant capital to strengthen our balance sheet and fund future growth,” he said.

Dell signs up Tech Data

Dell logoTech Data will distribute a number of products from Dell in the UK and Ireland.

Dell, which in times past was positively averse to the channel, has changed its tune completely in the last few years

The company said the extended relationship with Tech Data underlines its “continued investment” in the channel.

Tech Data is one of the largest distributors of technology products in the world, with sales of close to $28 billion and a network of 115,000 resellers worldwide.

Andy Gass, MD at Tech Data, said in a prepared statement: “Dell has made a strong commitment to the indirect channel by opening its full product range to us.”

And Tim Griffin, CEO of Dell UK said: “Over the past few years, Dell’s Partner Direct programme has grown exponentially and the channel is now, more than ever, an essential element in Dell’s overall business strategy. Partners like Tech Data are pivotal to our success.”

 

Industry experts talk up R2B, R2D2

highA group of executives behind the Retail to Business (R2B) initiative is warning retailers that they could be in a world of trouble if they don’t start targeting businesses.

The R2B initiative was formed by Context and it’s backed by execs from Lenovo, AMD, Lexmark, Tech Data and other companies. The ultimate goal is to make retailers more competitive and capable of taking on B2B resellers.

“Let’s stop the decline – or stores will end up being showrooms,” Global MD for Retail at Context Adam Simon told PCR. “Don’t just focus on consumers and tablets – blur the consumer and SMB. Support the small business people and their entourage.”

The consumerisation of IT and trends like BYOD is already blurring the line between SMBs and average people. Context argues British retailers could learn a thing or two from telecoms who have dedicated in-store corners in their shops for business users. Germany is also setting an interesting example, as its retailers are already selling heaps of laptops to businesses.