People Are Actually Talking About The Possible Collapse Of Dell's $24 Billion Take-Private Deal

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Michael Dell Davos

There may be talk, but I'm not listening!

Last December, Dell CEO Michael Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake began planning to take PC-maker Dell private.

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Then, in February the deal reached seeming consummation, with Dell's board agreeing to a $24 billion buyout.

In fact, the only threat to the deal was that another private equity, Blackstone, wanted to make Dell shareholders an even better offer.

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But then PC sales figure from the first quarter came out and – WHUMP – there went interest in Dell.

Last week, Blackstone withdrew its offer, citing reports that showed PC sales were deteriorating even faster than expected

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Now, there's talk that Silver Lake may want to pull its offer too.

Bloomberg's Peter Burrows and Jeffrey McCracken have a story out speculating that the main reason Silver Lake won't run away from the deal is that it would have to pay a humongeous $750 million break-up fee.

Importantly, Burrows and McCracken report "Neither Silver Lake nor the banks financing the buyout -- Barclays Plc, Bank of America Corp., Royal Bank of Canada and Credit Suisse Group AG -- have expressed a desire to get out of the deal."

But the fact that they bothered to write the story at all says a lot about how awful the PC business is right now.