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‘The shackles have come off’: Unisys sells gov’t business to SAIC for $1.2 billion; shares soar

Unisys has sold its government services unit and hopes to use the proceeds to pay down pension and bank debt so its remaining businesses may grow faster.

Unisys headquarters in Blue Bell, Pa.
Unisys headquarters in Blue Bell, Pa.Read moreUnisys.com

Shares of Unisys Corp. rose 46% Thursday, closing at $16.20, on a promise of better times after the Blue Bell-based IT security and services company said it has agreed to sell its U.S. government contracting unit to SAIC Corp. of Reston, Va., for $1.2 billion.

The cash will free Unisys to build and buy better products for its private-sector and foreign-focused Enterprise Solutions group — while also helping sell more of its licensed Stealth security software, CloudForte automation software, InteliServe managed services, and ClearPath processing systems, directly and through SAIC, Peter Altabef, Unisys’ CEO, told investors in a conference call.

“The shackles have come off the company,” Altabef crowed. Industry analysts asked whether the sale could make Unisys itself a takeover target. Altabef parried the question, saying it’s his priority “to build and strengthen this great company.”

Paying down debt will allow Unisys to build and acquire more and better products, he added.

Unisys stock reached as high as $17.99 a share in morning trading, up from $11.10 at Wednesday’s close. The end-of-day price was Unisys’ highest closing since 2015, the year Altabef took over, except for a brief period in 2018.

The federal contracting business that Unisys is selling accounts for about $700 million of the company’s $3 billion in yearly sales and almost 2,000 of its 21,000 worldwide employees.

Unisys employs about 500 at its Blue Bell headquarters, including a research group consolidated there from its former site in Malvern last August. The company had considered consolidating these operations in Philadelphia at Two Liberty Place in the late 2000s but dropped the plan when Center City neighbors objected to putting a business sign on the building.

Unisys has a rich lineage. The founders of a predecessor company built the pioneer computer ENIAC at the University of Pennsylvania. But the company’s debt and pension obligations have dragged on Unisys’ performance since it was formed by the merger of computer makers Burroughs and Sperry (successor to computing pioneer Univac) in 1986.

The deal announced Thursday will cut total debt by more than half and free Unisys cash flow for investment in new businesses.

Unisys plans to use sale proceeds to buy back $440 million in senior secured notes and contribute $600 million to pension plans, reducing its unfunded liability to $1.14 billion and covering looming contributions for the next three years. Expected future profits will enable Unisys to fully fund its pensions by 2025. Total Unisys debt will fall to $800 million from $1.9 billion.

Unisys began life in 1986 as a competitor to IBM and Microsoft. But over the next 30 years, sales fell by two-thirds (or more, if you count inflation) and employment by three-quarters as the company shifted from hardware to software, services, and security and sold businesses to stay afloat.

The company said the sale price was 13 times the business’ earnings (excluding finance cost), an attractive premium. “This transaction benefits all of our stakeholders,” Altabef said. “We expect to be able to invest more in new solutions” and gain “the ability to pursue larger deals.”

He added that the company also expects to boost profits and that its Enterprise Solutions unit raised revenue 4% over the year that ended Sept. 30 even without the cash infusion.

Altabef said Unisys now hopes to speed development and acquisition of artificial intelligence systems and sensor-based “Internet of Things” applications.

He said some Unisys workers who service federal contracts will remain with Unisys and enjoy “more opportunities,” while others will join SAIC.

As part of the deal, Unisys agreed to limit its pursuit of new U.S. government contracts over the next few years.