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Symantec Will Be ‘Very Judicious’ With $5 Bil M&A War Chest: CEO

Symantec ( SYMC ) will have a $5 billion M&A war chest by 2018 — but it’s not burning a hole in CEO Mike Brown’s pocket. Brown told investors Thursday that the cybersecurity firm will be “very judicious” in finding the right acquisitions. Cybersecurity stocks were walloped early Friday, and IBD’s 26-company Computer Security-Software industry group plunged 7% after LinkedIn ( LNKD ) and Tableau Software ( DATA ) stocks crashed 40% and 47%, respectively, when both companies gave weak guidance late Thursday. But Symantec stock bucked the trend, giving in-line guidance late Thursday and posting fiscal Q3 earnings that topped Wall Street estimates. In midday trading on the stock market today , Symantec shares were up more than 4%, near 20, after rising as much as nearly 10% early. The company late Thursday also announced a $500 million investment from private equity firm Silver Lake Partners , bumping its capital return program to $5.5 billion — a development that Wall Street analysts called opportune as Symantec’s M&A appetite grows. Ken Hao, a Silver Lake managing partner, joined Symantec’s board. Symantec is undergoing a necessary transition as it attempts to become “leaner and more focused,” FBR analyst Daniel Ives wrote in a research report. Ives reiterated his market perform rating on Symantec stock. Symantec on Jan. 29 completed its sale of data storage unit Veritas to the Carlyle Group for a purchase price of $7.4 billion. Late Thursday, Brown also announced a restructuring effort that aims to cut $400 million from expenses over two years. “We believe the confluence of M&A, aggressive buybacks and a tighter operating model finally puts this company on the right path after a decade of pain,” Ives wrote. “This remains a work-in-progress name, but we are now starting to be more optimistic that better days could be ahead for a ‘leaner and more focused’ Symantec.” And it doesn’t hurt “to have (Silver Lake) in Symantec’s corner,” he added. Customer, Enterprise Sales Decline Fiscal Q3 sales of $909 million and 26 cents earnings per share ex items beat the consensus of 29 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $905.8 million and 24 cents. Customer revenue of $414 million and enterprise revenue of $495 million fell 10.2% and 2.8% year over year, respectively, Credit Suisse analyst Philip Winslow wrote in a report. But those measures topped his estimates for $411 million and $492 million, Winslow noted. Current-quarter guidance for $885 million to $915 million in sales and 24-27 cents EPS ex items were in line with Wall Street views for $901.7 million and 25 cents. Eventual acceleration within the customer segment is likely, Winslow wrote. But “the outlook for accelerating enterprise security growth is more uncertain given intense competition across the enterprise security landscape and the endpoint in particular.” Winslow maintained his neutral rating and 25 price target on Symantec stock. Symantec is positioning itself with 12 new product releases in 2016 to build “a strong reputation in the next-generation security market,” William Blair analyst Jonathan Ho wrote. Competitors within that segment include Palo Alto Networks ( PANW ), CyberArk Software ( CYBR ) and Check Point Software Technologies ( CHKP ). Ho reiterated his market perform rating on Symantec stock. Midday Friday, shares of Palo Alto Networks, CyberArk and Check Point were down 12%, 8% and 2%, respectively.

Symantec Q3 Sales Seen Dipping Below $1 Billion Mark

Symantec ( SYMC ) Q3 sales are expected to dip below $1 billion for the first time since 2007, and Wall Street will closely watch the company’s Q4 outlook, which follows the completed sale of its data storage unit Veritas late last month. Intraday on the stock market today , Symantec stock was down fractionally ahead of the Q3 earnings report due late Thursday. Shares are down 8% since New Year’s Day and only rose a fraction when Veritas sold on Jan. 29. For its fiscal 2016 third quarter, ended Jan. 1, Symantec is expected to report $905.8 million in sales and 24 cents earnings per share ex items, down 45% and 55%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. That consensus view of 29 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters topped the midpoint of Symantec’s guidance, issued three months earlier, for $890 million-$920 million and 22-25 cents. Symantec said in January that its Q3 sales, operating margin and EPS minus items would come in above the midpoint of earlier views. Analysts were split last month on Symantec’s sale of Veritas, which it acquired in 2005 for $13.5 billion. Nine days before the deal closed, the Carlyle Group lowered its offer for a purchase price of $7.4 billion. The companies agreed to increase the amount of offshore cash remaining in Veritas to $400 million from $200 million, resulting in a net consideration to Symantec of $7 billion. The original deal valued Veritas at $8 billion. On Jan. 29, Symantec received $5.3 billion in after-tax cash proceeds when the sale closed, according to the company’s press release. Symantec will return more than $4 billion in capital to shareholders by the end of March 2017. Symantec CEO Michael Brown praised the deal, noting Symantec now “has a clear path forward as the global leader in cybersecurity.” Symantec has a market value of about $13 billion. It lags Check Point Software Security ( CHKP ) at $14 billion but tops Palo Alto Networks ( PANW ) at a little over $12 billion. Analysts have suggested Symantec will likely mount an M&A battle for cybersecurity supremacy. Symantec is struggling to keep up with the industry’s shift to next-generation technology touted by specialists like Palo Alto Networks, CyberArk Software ( CYBR ) and Check Point, William Blair analyst Jonathan Ho wrote in a research report last month. “The company will need to be prudent in terms of deploying capital to re-accelerate growth, given the high multiples for fast-growing companies,” he wrote. “The net reduction of $1 billion in capital to redeploy only services to limit that optionality further.”

CyberArk Spikes On Rumored Check Point M&A Talks

Check Point Software Technologies’ (CHKP) rumored interest in CyberArk Software (CYBR) could be the “tip of the iceberg” for cybersecurity M&A activity in 2016, FBR analyst Daniel Ives said Wednesday. CyberArk shares spiked 25% intraday on the stock market today, hitting a two-month high on news that Check Point may be in talks to acquire it. Shares closed 2015 up 14% for the year, but they are down 50% from the stock’s all-time high at 76.35,