SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. )
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Storage Technology Corporation
(Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Sun Microsystems, Inc.
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Filed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 14a-12
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Storage Technology Corporation
Commission File No.: 001-07534
The following presentation was posted on Sun Microsystems, Inc.s web site on June 2, 2005:
Sun Microsystems, Inc. To Acquire Storage Technology Corporation (StorageTek)
Bringing A Systems Approach to ILM
Investor Relations
http://www.sun.com/investors
This presentation contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements include statements regarding the expected financial performance of Sun Microsystems, Inc. following the consummation of the acquisition, Suns ability to achieve the expected synergies as a result of the acquisition, the strengthening of Suns position in the storage market as a result of the acquisition, and the expected timing for closing the acquisition in Fall 2005. Such statements are just predictions and involve risks and uncertainties such that actual results and performance may differ materially. Factors that might cause such a difference include the failure to (1) receive regulatory approval and approval from StorageTeks shareholders for the acquisition, (2) successfully integrate StorageTek and its employees into Sun and achieve expected synergies, (3) accurately forecast the acquisition related restructuring costs and allocation of the purchase price to in process research and development, goodwill and other intangibles charges, as well as the impact of equity based compensation expense associated with FAS 123R, (4) compete successfully in this highly competitive and rapidly changing marketplace, and (5) retain key employees. These and other risks are detailed from time to time in Suns periodic reports that are filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Suns annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2004 and its quarterly reports on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarters ended September 26, 2004, December 26, 2004 and March 27, 2005.
Slide 2
Speakers
Paul Ziots Manager, Investor Relations
Scott McNealy Chairman of the Board & CEO
Patrick Martin Chairman of the Board, President & CEO, StorageTek
Steve McGowan CFO & Executive VP, Corporate Resources
Joining for Q&A:
Jonathan Schwartz President & COO
Mark CanepaExecutive Vice President, Storage Products
Slide 3
Scott McNealy
Chairman of the Board and CEO, Sun Microsystems Patrick Martin Chairman, President and CEO, StorageTek
Industry Trends Driving Combination
Unabated data growth driving importance of storage to overall IT value delivered.
Regulatory environment increasing storage requirements
Storage remains a top CIO priority
Customers demanding fewer trusted enterprise IT providers
Convergence of Systems and Storage
Need Vision and Strategy Beyond Todays ILM
Slide 5
Data Matters: A New Era of Trust
Safety, Security, Privacy Matter
Slide 6
Future Leadership Requires A Comprehensive Strategy
Enterprise wide identity and provisioning
Regulation/compliance based data asset governance
Integrated network services software OS, Middleware ... etc.
Full line of systems, storage, online monitoring and services
Sun will be the most complete network centric player focusedon the future Information Ecosystem
Slide 7
Two Solutions Leaders Combine
The Network Computing Leader
23 years of innovation
Network Computing leadership
Systems architecture visionary
Mission Critical Data Management Leader
35 years of innovation
Defined ILM
Leader in tape drives
A Systems Approach To ILM
A total systems approach (not a storage approach)
DNA of reliability, security, scalability
Enhanced global coverage, reach, service, & support
Increasing Suns exposure to a market with a $65B* TAM
* Source: IDC 2005
Slide 8
Strategic Rationale
Driving a Systems Approach to ILM
Compute + Data + Management + Software
Focused R&D on innovation for customer benefit
Strengthen ability to deliver comprehensive solutions to a broader market
Increased distribution presence through 1,000+ salespeople and 2,000+ storage services professionals
Deepens Suns strategic importance to its largest customers and increases Suns exposure to the storage TAM of $65B*
Enhances Suns Financial Strength
*Source IDC 2005
Slide 9
Highly Complementary Businesses 5 Points of Alignment
Software/Management Products
Hardware Products
Management Talent
Global Selling and Service Teams
Development and Operations Teams
Slide 10
Sun Delivers a Comprehensive Storage Portfolio
Sun is committed to help customers drive down acquisition, deployment, and management costs
Sun continues to excel as a storage innovator and data management leader
Slide 11
The Synergies Grow With An End-to-end Play
High-End Disk
Sun StorEdge 99XX 12.7PB shipped, 40%+ in heterogeneous environments
Midrange Disk
Sun StorEdge 6920 Industry-leading capability in the midrange
Entry Disk and Tape
Complete portfolio of entry level disk & tape
Software
Solaris 10
Java Enterprise Systems Java Storage Systems
Enterprise Tape
Enterprise library of choice in many of the worlds largest data centers
Midrange Tape
Modular and Scalable
Software
Virtual Tape
Storage Resource Management
Global Sales and Service
Slide 12
Comprehensive Focus
Customer-Focused Solutions
Business and regulatory compliance
Enterprise content management
Business continuity
IT infrastructure consolidation
Engineering out complexity
Technology Innovation
Block and file convergence and beyond
Security and compliance
Heterogeneous manageability
System-wide virtualization
Open standards; developer focus
Continuous data protection
Expanded Reach
1000 extra sales and Systems Engineers
2000 extra services employees
Deep into IBM footprint
Mainframe accounts
Heterogeneous, multi-vendor support
Slide 13
Steve McGowan
CFO & EVP, Corporate Resources
Summary of Transaction
Consideration: $37 per share in cash for a total of approximately $4.1 billion
Transaction: Purchase business combination
Timing: Expected to close by late summer, early fall 2005
Closing Conditions: Subject to regulatory approvals, StorageTek shareholder approval, and customary closing conditions
Slide 15
Financials Trailing 4 Quarters ended March 2005
Sun StorageTek
Revenues $11.2B $2.2B
Gross Margin 40.9% 47.6%
R&D/SG&A $4.8B* $0.8B
Operating Expenses $5.3B $0.8B
Net Income $651M $191M
Non-GAAP Net Income
(Loss) ($189)M** N/A
* SG&A and R&D differs from operating expenses because Operating Expenses includes IPRD, Restructuring & Intangible Impairment charges. ** Amount excludes impact of IPRD, Restructuring, Equity gains, settlement income, settlement of litigation, valuation allowance on deferred tax assets and related tax effects. See reconciliation to non-GAAP Net Loss for full details.
Slide 16
Financials & Headcount
Trailing 4 Quarters ended March 2005
Sun StorageTek
Cash Flow From Ops $2,346M* $367M
Headcount** ~32,000 ~7,100
* Includes payments received from Microsoft of $1950M in Q4FY04 and $54M in Q3FY05.
** CY2005 March-ended data.
Slide 17
Balance Sheet Highlights
Sun* Sun + StorageTek**
Cash*** $7.4B $4.5B
Debt $1.1B $1.1B
*CY2005 March-ended data. **After the closing of the proposed acquisition using March 2005 ended cash balances ***Includes Cash and investments.
Slide 18
Scott McNealy
Chairman of the Board and CEO
Breadth and Depth
StorageTek depth
Deep datacenter expertise
Deep customer relationships
Heterogeneous support and service
Complementary product lines and services
Suns breadth
Broad product line from systems to software
Leadership in end to end systems
Complementary product lines and services
Slide 20
Sun Has All The Critical Elements To Lead
Solution Practices
Java Clients
Data Management
Java Enterprise System
Operating Environment
Processors
Global data management practice expertise
Full scope of information management offerings
Proven solutions at high scale for Identity, Portals, Webservices and Communications
Widely acclaimed next gen OS availableon multiple platforms
Chip multithreading leadership
Slide 21
Question and Answer Session
Appendix
Trailing Four Quarters Sun GAAP to Non-GAAP Net Income Reconciliation
Sun GAAP Income $651M
In-process Research and Development 69M
Restructuring Charges 326M
Gain on Equity Investments (1)M
Impairment Expense 49M
Settlement Income (1,651)M
Settlement of Litigation 55M
Valuation on Deferred Tax Assets (34)M
Related Tax Effects 347M
Non-GAAP Loss ($189)M
Slide 24
Additional Information & Where to Find It
StorageTek has agreed to file a proxy statement in connection with the proposed acquisition. The proxy statement will be mailed to the stockholders of StorageTek. StorageTeks stockholders are urged to read the proxy statement and other relevant materials when they become available because they will contain important information about the acquisition and StorageTek. Investors and security holders may obtain free copies of these documents (when they are available) and other documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) at the SECs web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, investors and security holders may obtain free copies of the documents filed with the SEC by StorageTek by going to StorageTeks Investor Relations page on its corporate website at www.storagetek.com.
In addition, StorageTek and its officers and directors may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from StorageTeks stockholders with respect to the acquisition. A description of any interests that StorageTeks officers and directors have in the acquisition will be available in the proxy statement. In addition, Sun may be deemed to have participated in the solicitation of proxies from StorageTeks stockholders in favor of the approval of the acquisition. Information concerning Suns directors and executive officers is set forth in Suns proxy statement for its 2004 annual meeting of stockholders, which was filed with the SEC on September 22, 2004, and annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC on September 13, 2004. These documents are available free of charge at the SECs web site at www.sec.gov or by going to Suns Investor Relations page on its corporate website at www.sun.com.
Slide 25
Sun Microsytems, Inc. To Acquire Storage Technology Corporation
(StorageTek)
Bringing A Systems Approach To ILM
Investor Relations
http://www.sun.com/investors
Filed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 14a-12
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Storage Technology Corporation
Commission File No.: 001-07534
The following script was prepared for a conference call held on June 2, 2005:
Sun and StorageTek Conference Call Script
Paul Ziots, Manager of Investor Relations for Sun Microsystems: Good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us. With me today is Scott McNealy, Suns Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Pat Martin, StorageTeks Chairman, CEO & President, and Steve McGowan, Suns Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President, Corporate Resources. Jonathan Schwartz, Suns President and Chief Operating Officer, and Mark Canepa, Suns Executive Vice President, Network Storage Products Group will join us for the Q&A session. The purpose of todays call is to discuss this mornings announcement that Sun and StorageTek have entered into a definitive agreement under which Sun will acquire StorageTek.
We have posted slides you can view on the web which accompany our prepared remarks. These slides can be viewed at sun.com/investors and at storagetek.com.
The prepared remarks of our call today will last about 25 minutes, with the remaining 35 minutes devoted to the Q&A session.
During the course of this conference call, we will make projections or other forward-looking statements. Such statements are just predictions and involve risks and uncertainties such that actual results may differ materially. Ill refer you to Suns and StorageTeks periodic reports that are filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Sun reports include the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2004 and Form 10-Qs for the quarters ended September 26, 2004, December 26, 2004, and March 27, 2005. These documents contain and identify important factors that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those contained in our projections.
In addition, during the course of the conference call, we will describe certain non-GAAP financial measures, which should be considered in addition to, and not in lieu of, comparable GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our website at sun.com/investors for the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and related reconciliation.
With that, Ill turn it over to Scott.
Scott: Thanks Paul. Good morning everyone.
Im thrilled to announce that StorageTek and Sun have signed a definitive agreement for Sun to acquire StorageTek. This acquisition strengthens Suns mission to solve complex network computing problems for governments, enterprises, and service providers.
When we first discussed the possibility of combining our two great companies, it was apparent to me that we share a similar vision for helping our customers take cost and complexity out of their IT infrastructure. It was also very clear that together we could be the first in the industry to bring a systems approach to Information Lifecycle Management.
It takes critical mass and a systems strategy to be a leader in the new world of network computing and mission critical data management. With todays announcement Sun strengthens its position as 4th largest storage company in the world and the most complete network centric player focused on the future data management.
There continue to be huge issues relating to security of data assets and this is a paramount concern for customers. With the combined assets of Sun and StorageTek we can now offer a better option to address these problems.
The industry trends driving the combination are things like:
| Unabated data growth driving importance of storage to overall IT value delivered |
| Regulatory environment increasing storage requirements |
| Storage remaining a top CIO priority |
| Customers demanding fewer trusted enterprise IT providers |
| Convergence of systems and storage |
| Necessity of vision and strategy beyond todays ILM |
Ive been asked repeatedly by the financial community how we would spend some of Suns $7.4 billion in cash and if we would ever do a large acquisition. My response has always been it would have to be very strategic and one that would benefit Suns customers, partners and shareholders. With StorageTek, we saw an opportunity, we took a shot and we scored.
The strategic rationale for this deal is a no brainer. In addition to transforming Sun into the industrys comprehensive data center solution source with a true systems approach, the acquisition:
| Strengthens our ability to deliver comprehensive solutions to a broader market |
| Increases distribution presence through 1,000+ salespeople and 2,000 + storage services professionals |
| Deepens Suns strategic importance to its largest customers and increases Suns exposure to the storage TAM of $65b. |
| Enhances Suns financial strength |
Sun has chosen to tackle the storage market opportunity with StorageTek for four simple reasons:
| StorageTek brings 35 years of innovation in mission critical data management and is the creator of Information Lifecycle Management (ILM) |
| StorageTek has $1.1 billion in cash and investments and continues to produce profits and generate cash |
| StorageTeks world-class sales force adds 1000 feet on the street focused on capturing share for Sun in the lucrative storage market |
| Finally, the fact that StorageTek has been a trusted partner of Suns for over 10 years gives me confidence the we have numerous synergies from cultural similarities to shared best business and product development practices |
This merger is definitely the right move, for the right reasons, at the right time. And after having spent many hours with StorageTeks management and Board of Directors, I know that together we create a more powerful force in the storage industry.
The result will be a company that is able to offer the industrys most comprehensive solutions, help customers maximize the asset utilization and value of their storage investments and, in turn, create significant long-term value for all Sun stockholders. The future is about managing and utilizing massive data content archives. Suns ability to protect the security of customers data is unmatched with the combination of Solaris 10, a full suite of identity management offerings and the industrys most scalable file systems & archival policy engines on the planet. StorageTek, with 35 years of R&D in data storage and over 36% of the worlds archived data housed in their systems can achieve economies of scale like no other. Together, we bring nearly 60 years of experience in mission-critical environments to our customers and partners.
The products, services and solutions both companies offer are highly complimentary. Both Sun and StorageTek remain committed to current product roadmaps and maintain commitments to our customers. At close well be in a better position to discuss our future roadmap that combines both products, services and solutions.
I would now like to turn the call over to Pat to share his thoughts on todays announcement.
Pat: Thanks, Scott.
| This merger is a strategic business combination of two of the leading IT innovators in the industry. |
| Both companies focusing on mission-critical, compute- and data-intensive compute environments; they are joining together to bring the broadest ILM solutions coupled with the most robust corporate platform in the industry. |
| STK is known for its strong enterprise presence, offering the most robust, industry-leading ILM and recovery storage solutions, backed by the best, most customer-oriented sales/service organization - and now can bring these solutions through a broader channel. |
| So we are combining the broad channel reach of Sun with the deep, intimate understanding of customers storage problems. |
| For customers: plus one-stop shop, leverage and address ILM at point of server purchase, broader portfolio of solutions offered by the combined company. |
| Driven by opportunity/need. |
| Save time, money, resources |
Ill now turn the call over to Steve.
Steve:
Thank you, Pat. Ill give a brief summary of the transaction and then discuss a few relevant financial metrics.
Under the terms of the transaction, StorageTek shareholders will receive $37 per share in cash with the overall deal valued at approximately $4.1 billion dollars. This represents an 18.5 percent premium over yesterdays closing price.
We expect the transaction to close in late Summer or early Fall and it will be accounted for as a purchase acquisition. The closing is subject to regulatory approval, StorageTek shareholder approval, and customary closing conditions.
We expect the transaction to be accretive to non-GAAP earnings in the first 12 months following close. We are discussing non-GAAP information due to the inability at this time to estimate the acquisition-related restructuring costs and the specific allocation of the purchase price to IPRD, goodwill, other intangibles, acquisition-related inventory and other asset adjustments as well as the impact of equity based compensation expense associated with FAS 123R. Taking into account these transaction-related costs, we expect the acquisition to be dilutive on a GAAP basis in the first twelve months following close.
Three of the posted slides show certain key financial metrics for the last 4 quarters ended March 2005 for both Sun and StorageTek. As you can see, from a historical perspective, without considering any synergies, the acquisition of StorageTek would have contributed positively to our revenue, gross margin, and cash flow from operations. In the future, with anticipated synergies, we will expect further improvements in performance in each of these metrics. Additionally StorageTeks balance sheet at March 2005 included approximately $1.1 billion dollars in cash and investments, which reduces the net cash outlay to Sun for this acquisition to approximately $3 billion dollars.
Steve: With that, let me turn it back to Scott.
Scott: Thanks, Steve.
The Breadth and Depth of the combined company is just astounding:
StorageTek:
| Deep datacenter expertise |
| Deep customer relationships |
| Heterogeneous support and service |
| Complementary product lines and services |
Sun:
| Broad product line from systems to software |
| Leadership in end to end systems |
| Complementary product lines |
Ultimately, this deal is all about bringing together extraordinary customer confidence, with extraordinary innovation to yield extraordinary value to our respective stockholders, customers and employees.
Were going to do everything we can to make sure that the integration runs smoothly and swiftly so we can get out there and start selling like crazy.
Back to Paul for Q&A...
Paul: Thanks Scott, Pat, and Steve. Now, lets take your questions. Jonathan Schwartz and Mark Canepa will be joining us for the Q&A session. Operator (or name of facilitator), will you please start the question and answer session?
Filed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 14a-12
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Storage Technology Corporation
Commission File No.: 001-07534
The following e-mail was sent by Scott McNealy and Jonathan Schwartz to the StorageTek employees on June 2, 2005:
Dear StorageTek employees,
I just want to let you all know how excited we are about the definitive agreement that was announced today.
Sun and StorageTek have been great partners for 10 years. As one company, we believe we can be even more successful.
Your expertise in the management of mission-critical data provides the perfect complement to our expertise in systems architecture and network computing. Together, we can significantly uplevel our competitive position and provide a truly comprehensive solution set.
As we move forward in our plan to unite our companies, we will build our annual revenue to $13 billion and instantly broaden our combined worldwide customer base.
We are tremendously excited about the wealth of talent that StorageTek offers, and I think youll find that we already have a lot in common, including a shared commitment to open standards and a consistent focus on innovation.
As we begin to consider merging personnel and functions, we are confident that our combined products, services, and solutions will be highly complementary. We do not expect significant redundancies; instead, we look forward to building our plan to combine talent and expertise to capitalize on the tremendous market opportunities we see
ahead.
The deal is expected to close by the end of our first quarter in FY06 (late summer/early fall, 2005).
We are tremendously excited about this transaction. It reflects our shared determination to offer the best solutions to our customers. As more details emerge, we intend to keep you informed and connected. Visit the intranet site that will be announced later today for continued updates.
Scott McNealy
Chairman and CEO
Jonathan Schwartz
President and COO
Sun Microsystems