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Sun Microsystems

Sun to cut 3000 jobs in the wake of Oracle takeover

Sun Microsystems plans to slash about 3000 jobs around North America as part of the company’s restructuring plan, it was announced today.

Sun Microsystems’ board of directors confirmed this morning the company needed to “better align” its resources with its strategic objectives, which includes making 3000 people redundant over the next 12 months. The move comes about two months after database giant Oracle bought the company.

As Oracle waits, Sun sinks to $US210m loss

In possibly its last quarter before being taken over by Oracle, Sun has gone nova. But there is one ray of hope.

Struggling Sun Microsystems (NAS: JAVA) has performed even more poorly than analysts expected in its latest quarter.

Including $US46 million in charges, the server maker’s loss widened from $US34 million in the year-ago quarter to $US201 million.

The Sun also sets: shares sink 24% on IBM meltdown

Sun’s stock, which rose 80% on the day IBM’s proposed takeover was announced, is now setting.

What looked like such a promising deal for the struggling server maker will now only be remembered for poor Ernest Hemmingway knock-off headlines.

Yesterday, in apparently testosterone-fuelled, confrontational talks, Sun rejected a lowered IBM offer of purportedly $US9.40 a share. IBM walked away.

IBM-Sun talks melt down

One breaking report has IBM-Sun takeover talks near collapse as struggling Sun refuses to accept a lowered offer. Another says IBM has already walked away from the $US7 billion megadeal.

A Wall Street Journal news alert says: “It's possible the two sides are hardening their positions only to strike a full deal in the near future. But for now the stance is confrontational.”

IBM moves close to sealing Sun deal - with a lower bid

IBM has lowered its bid to buy Sun Microsystems as the two companies come close to finalising the takeover. The deal will still be the biggest in IBM’s history, by some margin.

The Wall Street Journal reports this morning that struggling Sun has accepted IBM’s lower offer of between $US9 and $US10 a share ($US10 to $US11 was originally mooted, representing a 100% premium on Sun’s then market cap) in exchange for a series of concessions.

Wall Street advances again as Fed doles out more cash

(9.15am market close update) US stocks advanced for the sixth out of the past seven sessions after the Federal Reserve said it would buy $US750 billion in mortgage securities and $US300 billion in longer-term Treasury bonds to help shore up the financial system.