Become a Member
Life

The Israel firm in high demand, Mellanox

November 22, 2012 08:41
Mellanox's Eyal Waldman

By

Simon Griver,

Simon Griver

3 min read

Tel Aviv capital market veterans will do well to remember an Israeli high-tech firm with as high expectations as Mellanox. The company, which offers a choice of fast interconnect products: adapters, switches, software and silicon that accelerate application runtime, has seen its value soar over the past two years. In 2010, US computer hardware giant Oracle reportedly offered $1 billion to buy Mellanox, after purchasing 10 per cent of the company’s shares. This summer, rumours were rife that Oracle had come back with a $6 billion offer, a premium of 30 per cent on the company’s share price.

Asked whether the rumours were true, Mellanox founder and chief executive Eyal Waldman says: “We do not comment on specific rumours but I can say that there has been interest in the company. However, we feel that it is in the best interests of our shareholders to grow Mellanox as an independent company.”
Such a response is likely to be welcomed by many Israelis, who believe that Israeli start-ups have a tendency to sell-out too soon, with high-tech entrepreneurs eager to accept the first offer that comes along.
Mr Waldman says: “I don’t want to criticise anybody. I understand why people sell their businesses. You set up a start-up and you work very hard for seven or eight years and then somebody comes along with a very good offer, and you think: ‘Why not?’ It’s great for the individuals involved but it doesn’t do very much for the Israeli economy.”

This is not the first time that Mr Waldman has faced the dilemma of whether to sell a company or maintain its independence. Born in Jerusalem, and a graduate of the Technion, he worked for Intel for four years before co-founding Galileo Technology in 1994, which produced computer switches and hubs.
But in 1999, he had a high-profile falling out with its fellow founders. He says: “I think the media have exaggerated what happened for there was no real bad blood. But there was a difference of opinion and I had wanted to grow the company while my colleagues wanted to sell.”
Mr Waldman left Galileo and set up Mellanox the same year. Galileo was sold the following year to Marvell for $2.8 billion.

Yet Mr Waldman has never looked back. After raising $89 million from venture capital funds, the company went public on Nasdaq and the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in 2007, raising $102 million at a company value of $500 million.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.