For a second time, Oracle extended its bid Wednesday to acquire billing and revenue management software vendor Portal Software,
given that the deal has yet to win the wholehearted support of Portal shareholders.
Database and applications vendor Oracle publicly announced plans to purchase Portal for $4.90 per share on April 12, valuing the company at around $220 million. That original offer expired May 22 and Oracle
renewed the bid with an expiry date of June 6 at 12:00 a.m. EDT. Oracle has now extended the same offer for a second time
with an expiry date of June 20 at 12:00 a.m. EDT.
As of midnight June 6, around 23.2 million Portal shares had been tendered for the Oracle offer.
Portal tried to nudge its shareholders to accept the Oracle offer last week when it issued an investor slide presentation providing more details of why the Portal
board decided a sale to Oracle was the company's best bet. Portal was delisted from Nasdaq last year and the company's management
and Oracle executives maintain Portal's continued financial viability as a stand-alone firm is in question.
Although the purchase has yet to close, Oracle has already stressed the importance of adding Portal's software to its portfolio as a way for Oracle to gain more
business with communications and media companies.
Portal's second largest shareholder, Berggruen Holdings North America, which holds a 9.1 percent stake, has been very vocal
in its disapproval of the Oracle deal. It has fired off a string of letters to Portal President and Chief Executive Officer
David Labuda. The Berggruen argument is that Portal has tried to rush through the sale of the company to Oracle at a knock-down
price.
In his latest missive to Labuda, dated June 1, Joshua Horowitz, director of research at Berggruen, criticized Portal's decision
to issue the investor slide presentation, describing it as "an after-the-fact, self-serving attempt to induce investors to
tender at an inadequate price" and "another attempt to frighten and coerce stockholders."