Contact: Brenon Daly
Is Big Yellow planning to slim down? That’s the question that was echoing around Wall Street on June 25 after Symantec showed Enrique Salem the door following another lackluster quarterly performance.
Symantec reported fiscal Q1 revenue was essentially flat with the year-earlier period, as its storage and server management unit (the company’s largest single business) actually shrank in Q1. Even when the unit grows, it lags Symantec’s other main business of security. For the full previous fiscal year, the storage business increased just 4%, compared to a 20% rise in security sales.
That discrepancy – along with the fact that Symantec shares have lost about one-third of their value since the security company got into the storage business with its mid-2005 acquisition of Veritas – has prompted calls from investors to unwind Veritas. We understand Symantec has been exploring that option since Salem took the top spot three years ago. One of the more intriguing ideas we heard was Symantec swapping its storage business for the RSA unit at EMC. However, we gather the separation of the units, along with tax implications, made that too complicated.
Incoming CEO Steve Bennett, who has been chairman of Symantec for a year, has indicated that he will review Symantec’s portfolio. Wall Street, of course, read a fair amount into that, as well as the CEO changeover. One source noted that Bennett had overseen a handful of divestitures during his tenure as chief executive of Intuit, including shedding the construction management software unit and unwinding the company’s Blue Ocean acquisition. However, we would characterize those moves as a typical bit of corporate housecleaning – a far cry from the teardown that some investors are calling for at Symantec.
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