A general view of the Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company offices in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 3, 2024.
Aaronp | Bauer-Griffin | GC images | Getty images
Company: Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE)
Business: Hewlett Pckard Enterprise It is a global border to cloud company. It offers open and intelligent technological solutions as a service. The company offers cloud services, computation, high performance computer science and artificial intelligence, smart edge, software and storage. Its segments include server, hybrid cloud, smart edge, financial services, corporate investments and others. Its server segment offers consist or general purpho servers for multiple loading computer science, servers optimized by Wortad and integrated systems. Its hybrid cloud segment sacrifices a range of native and hybrid solutions in the cloud in the cloud, the private cloud and the infrastructure software space as a service. Its intelligent edge segment sacrifices local areas of local and wireless area, campus, branch and change of data center, and others. Its financial services segment provides flexible investment solutions, such as lease, financing, IT consumption, public service programs and asset management services.
Market value: $ 19.88b ($ 15.14 per share)
Hewlett Packard Enterprise shares in the last 12 months
Activist: Elliott Investment Management
Property: ~ 7.4%
Average cost: after
Activist comment: Elliott is a very successful and cunning activist investor. The firm’s team includes analysts from main technological capital companies, engineers, operational partners, former CEO of Technology and COO. When evaluating an investment, Elliott also hires specialty and specialty management consultants, expert cost analysts and industry specialists. The firm often observes companies for many years before investing and has an extensive stable of impressive candidates of the Board. Elliott has historically focused on strategic activism in the technology sector and has been very successful with that strategy. However, in recent years its activism group has grown, and the company has been doing much more governance -oriented activism and creating value for board to a wide amplitude of colleagues.
What is happening
Behind the scenes
Hewlett Pckard Enterprise (HPE) is a global cloud edge company that offers open and intelligent technological solutions as a service. The company split from HP INC in 2015. HPQ, the rest of the PC, desktop and printers businesses, while HPE, the spinco, focuses on servers, storage and networks. Most HPE income (53.8%) derives from its server segment, which consists of general purphosis servers for fasting fasting servers for wheat, optimized servers with workkad and integrated systems. Its hybrid cloud segment (17.88%) offers a range of native and hybrid solutions in the cloud in storage, private cloud and infrastructure software such as space. Its smart edge segment (15.04%) offers networks of wired and wireless local areas. The rest of HPE’s income is derived from their financial services, investments and other activities. This comprehensive products portfolio is distinguished by pairs such as Dell or Cisco, which generally lack one or more of these pieces. Despite this unique marketing position, the company is still undervalued to its peers. Currently, HPE quotes with profits of less than 5 times before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, compared to its closest pairs Dell in more than 7 times EBITA, which reflects a 30%discount.
The main driver of the HPE undervaluation seems to be a bad execution and a loss of credibility with the market. In Q1, HPE reported a decrease in net income in its central server business. The company attributed this loss to erroneous price servers in relation to inventory costs, which went unnoticed until the end of the quarter. As a result, the action was sold sharply in the days after the company’s profits. Meanwhile, Dell reported rhythms both in income and margin for the same quarter. However, this is not an isolated incident, but the last one in a low performance story. Since Dell resumed trade in NYSE at the end of 2018, it has surpassed HPE yields in approximately 200%.
While your server business is the main business for HPE, much of the opportunity revolves around the network business. This is a multiple business that Dell does not have. HPE’s Intelligent Edge Business represents a third of the company’s profits, and network partners such as Cisco Trade in 12 times Ebitda. If Intelligent Edge was negotiated in that multiple, almost all business value or HPE today would be worth. That leaves a significant value of the company’s central server and its cloud storage business, even if those companies continued to operate 5 times Ebitda. This value increases significantly with a better management and efficiency execution, which should lead to those companies at 7 times multiple offices of Dell. In addition, although the HPE differentiator is its upper multiple networks business, Dell’s main differentiator is a desktop and low multipurpose business, so there can be a case that Dell de Hpe’s analogue in a higher PESH.
There is also a great uncertainty that is hanging on HPE: its pending acquisition of Juniper Networks, a couple of networks for HPE and Cisco. The $ 14 billion agreement, originally announced in January 2024, has stagnated. Earlier this year, the Department of Justice hosts to block the acquisition, saying that it would eliminate competition. This uncertainty puts HPE in a crucial turning point, something that markets disgust inherently, especially when management lacks an intelligent execution history. The potential complications here are clear: if the agreement is blocked, HPE would have about 25% of its capital market capitalization, indications that management can obtain a hurried and risky acquisition to compensate for this failed transaction. On the contrary, if the agreement is made, given the recent HPE execution steps, investors can if the company can effectively integrate a business of the size of Juniper. Therefore, although acquiring Juniper would significantly improve the combination of HPE profitability to almost 50% attributed to the highest multiple networks, many market participants may be considering this as a loss of loss. But with adequate supervision, it should be a mutual benefit.
This is where Elliott comes as a creator of potential value for HPE. With sufficient representation of the shareholders in the Board that restores the confidence that the company will be very in tune with the value of the shareholders, the uncertainty of Juniper could have a great opportunity for Shawolts or not. If the agreement is blocked and there is a strong representation of the shareholders at the Board, the shareholders will have confidence that the great net cash position will be used wisely, either through a diligent acquisition and of disciplined creation. If the agreement closes, shareholders will have more confidence that a renewed board will do a better job that will integrate the juniper. Elliott is one of the most prolific activist investors today with an effective and successful strategic activism history in the technological sector. In the last 10 years, the company has hired 25 technology companies and has delivered an average or 20.60% versus 8.56% performance for the Russell 2000 during the same periods. However, in the six of those 25 sitations where Elliott received representation of the Board, the company returned an average or 45.53% versus 15.35% for the Russell 2000 during the same periods of time. It is important to note that Elliott has a deep family with Juniper, which had previously hired the 2014-2015 company. In this commitment, Elliott requested a series of capital allocation and strategic initiatives, and finally comply with the seats of the Board for Gary Daichendt and Kevin Denuccio. In particular, Denuccio is still on the Juniper board today.
While we believe that Elliott’s activist campaign and the HPE value are convincing about a complete activist cycle alone, given today’s economic climate, it would be negligent not to mention something about tariffs. HPE is likely to be in a better position than Dell to face certain winds against geopolitics. Most HPE servers comply with the United States-Mexico Agreement and are manufactured in Mexico. On the contrary, a significant portion of Dell PC products are manufactured in China and, therefore, are significantly exhibited more tariff risk.
Ken Squire is the founder and president of 13D Monitor, an institutional investigation service on shareholders’ activism, and the founder and portfolio manager of the 13D activist fund, a mutual fund that invests in an investment portfolio 13d Invests 13d.