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Xerox Ends 57-Year Venture With $2.3 Billion Sale to Fujifilm

Xerox Holdings agreed to sell 25% of Fuji Xerox to its Japanese partner

Xerox Ends 57-Year Venture With $2.3 Billion Sale to Fujifilm
The logo of Fuji Xerox Co., the joint venture between Fujifilm Holdings Corp. and Xerox Corp., is displayed outside the company’s headquarters in Tokyo, Japan. (Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Xerox Holdings Corp. agreed to sell 25% of Fuji Xerox to its Japanese partner, jettisoning its slice of the five-decade old venture after a merger attempt fell through.

Fujifilm Holdings Corp. will buy the stake for $2.3 billion and own 100% of Fuji Xerox, the companies said in a statement Tuesday. Shares in Fujifilm jumped 6.7%, their biggest gain since February 2018, after the Wall Street Journal reported on the deal before trading closed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

Xerox, a name synonymous with the copying industry, had signaled since 2018 it intended to sever ties with its Japanese ally. Forged in 1962, the Fuji Xerox joint venture was one of the oldest tie-ups between an American and Japanese firm. The deal will bring to a close a two-year saga involving a complex merger plan, a chief executive’s ouster, several lawsuits and activist investors Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason.

Xerox Ends 57-Year Venture With $2.3 Billion Sale to Fujifilm

“Full ownership of Fuji Xerox will facilitate faster decision making in a rapidly changing business environment,” Shigetaka Komori, Fujifilm’s chief executive officer, said in the statement.

The transaction will have a “mid-to-long term positive impact” on earnings after Fuji Xerox becomes a 100% owned subsidiary, Fujifilm said. The deal to buy Xerox’s stake also includes 51% ownership in Xerox International Partners, an original equipment supplier in the U.S. and Europe, the companies said.

The original merger proposal unveiled in 2018 called for Fuji Xerox to borrow money to buy out Fujifilm’s ownership stake, then Fujifilm using the money to buy a majority share in Xerox.

The resulting merger would’ve reduced Xerox’s original stake. But the deal was immediately opposed by Icahn and Deason, who at the time owned about 15% of Xerox and claimed it severely undervalued the company. Icahn then scored another win in May 2018 when he won a bid to oust former Xerox CEO and shuffle the board of the documents solutions company.

Fujifilm said it would withdraw lawsuits it filed against Xerox last year, after the deal was canceled. Fuji Xerox, operating as a subsidiary of Fujifilm, will continue to supply to Xerox after the transaction is completed, the companies said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lisa Du in Tokyo at ldu31@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Edwin Chan at echan273@bloomberg.net, ;Sam Nagarajan at samnagarajan@bloomberg.net, Reed Stevenson

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