Converge Digest

HPE and Juniper Settle DOJ Case, Pave Way for $14B Merger

Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Juniper Networks have reached a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice, resolving antitrust concerns over HPE’s proposed $14 billion acquisition of Juniper. The agreement, which is subject to court approval, allows the transaction to proceed with limited conditions.

As part of the settlement, HPE will divest its global Instant On portfolio, which serves campus and branch networking needs, and will allow limited post-close access to Juniper’s Mist AIOps platform. These remedies address the DOJ’s competitive concerns while preserving the deal’s strategic goals. The merger brings together HPE’s Aruba Networking business with Juniper’s AI-native solutions, aimed at reshaping competition in enterprise and service provider networking—particularly for AI data centers and hybrid cloud environments.

“Our agreement with the DOJ paves the way to close HPE’s acquisition of Juniper Networks and preserves the intended benefits of this deal for our customers and shareholders, while creating greater competition in the global networking market,” said Antonio Neri, president and CEO of HPE. “For the first time, customers will now have a modern network architecture alternative that can best support the demands of AI workloads.”

Juniper CEO Rami Rahim added, “This marks an exciting step forward in delivering on a critical customer need – a complete portfolio of modern, secure networking solutions to connect their organizations and provide essential foundations for hybrid cloud and AI. We look forward to closing this transaction and turning our shared vision into reality.”

Some highlights:

Some slides from the webcast (linked below)

https://investors.hpe.com/~/media/Files/H/HP-Enterprise-IR/documents/hpe-to-acquire-juniper-investor-relations-deck.pdf

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