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Dude, You're Getting Taken By A Dell

Feb. 15, 2013 2:33 PM ETDell Inc. (DELL-OLD) Stock7 Comments

The title should be familiar, if somewhat vague. It's a flippant takeoff of Dell's (DELL) catchy marketing tag, "Dude, you're getting a Dell." Seasoned investors will remember the tag delivered by a precocious teenager whose mission was to get his friends (and thus you and me) to buy a Dell computer.

It worked. By the early 2000s, Dell grew to become the largest PC seller and a raging financial success. During one 20-month period, Dell's stock split 2-for-1 four separate times. You can be sure that Dell's management had no intention of taking the company private back then; it was too occupied with reaping the wealth-amplifying benefits of public financial markets.

But times change. If someone today were to proclaim "Dude, you're getting a Dell," the response would likely be a shrug, or even a "What, no iPad? No Surface?"

Indifference -- from consumer and investor alike -- has plagued Dell for the past 10 years. After Dell's share price peaked near $56 in early 2000, it's been mostly a slow slog downhill. Only a few months ago, Dell's share price was a lowly $8.69. There hasn't been a stock split in 14 years.

Dell's growth has stagnated since 2006. Its PCs and laptops have been upstaged by newer, hipper computing and communications devices from Apple (AAPL), Amazon.com (AMZN), Samsung (OTCPK:SSNLF), and even Microsoft (MSFT).

Now, founder, chairman, CEO, and 16% stock owner Michael Dell wants to right a steeply listing ship outside the purview of public opinion. He has raised $24.4 billion to do it, and when all is said and done he and global technology investment firm Silver Lake will own the company. If I were a Dell shareholder, I would not only be offended but appalled by the offer, especially if I were a shareholder whose cost basis exceeds the $13.65 per share Michael Dell is offering. I say that

This article was written by

Ian Wyatt is an active investor, a well-regarded investment expert and an Internet entrepreneur. He is the Chief Investment Strategist at Wyatt Investment Research, and plays a leading role in each of the company’s investment newsletters and trading services.As a well-regarded market expert, Ian has written for Marketwatch, Zacks Investment Research, Seeking Alpha, Yahoo! Finance and The Burlington Free Press. He has been interviewed or quoted in articles in well-known publications including AOL Finance Blogging Stocks, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine, Barron Magazine, Barrons.com, Forbes.com, The Dick Davis Digest, The Dick Davis Income Digest, The Wall Street Transcript, TheStockAdvisors.com, Money Show Digest, The New Jersey Star Ledger, The Wisconsin State Journal and The Seattle Times. In 1998, Ian combined two of his passions, stocks and the Internet, with the launch of a free investment web site with expert advice about investing in stocks. Ian founded Business Financial Publishing and Wyatt Investment Research in 2001, publishing investment newsletters for individual investors. Since then, the company has evolved into an Internet content company publishing e-letters, special reports, newsletters, trading services and financial web sites. Business Financial Publishing was named #185 on the 2008 Inc. Magazine Inc. 500 list of the fastest growing companies in the United States, achieving a 3-year growth rate of 1,303%. The company currently reaches over one million individual investors weekly through its free e-letters. His first book, The Small-Cap Investor: Secrets to Winning Big with Small-Cap Stocks, was published by John Wiley & Sons in September 2009. Ian lives in the Green Mountains of Vermont with his wife Carrie.

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