Dell Spins Off VMware
It was kind of weird when Dell bought VMware in the first place. It was billed as sort of a move to get Dell into the enterprise space by having sort of an inside track with VMware. If that wasn’t weird enough the mechanics of the merger were even weirder, where Dell basically bought a lot of shares of VMware, but not all of them, allowing VMware to continue trading on the stock market, even though it was functionally a part of Dell… or sometime. Ironically, just when it seemed like VMware would be a significant part of the future of enterprise computing, it was made superfluous by the rise of cloud providers like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft providing their own virtual hypervisor platforms and management systems. Much of VMware’s market share these days is simply the inertia of companies that haven’t moved on. Anyway, Dell spun off VMware today by giving the 81% of VMware stock that it owned to Dell shareholders. For each share of Dell stock, shareholders get 0.440626 shares. In lieu of fractional shares, the company will pay out cash, so if you have 100 Dell shares, you’ll get 44 shares of VMware and cash for …