Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nokia aims to become networks giant with deal

- BY MATTI HUUHTANEN

HELSINKI — Nokia will buy ailing French telecom company Alcatel- Lucent for around 15.6 billion euros ($ 16.5 billion) through a public exchange of shares in France and the United States, in a bid to become a leading global networks operator.

Though Alcatel-Lucent has been racking up billions of euros of losses since its creation in 2006, Nokia seems to believe it can cut costs and hopes the deal will give it scale in the market of providing the networks that mobile phones use.

The Finnish company said Wednesday that the all-share transactio­n will be on the basis of 0.55 of a new Nokia share for every share of Alcatel-Lucent. According to the deal, Alcatel-Lucent shareholde­rs would own 33.5 percent of the fully diluted share capital of the combined company, with Nokia shareholde­rs owning 66.5 percent.

Nokia stock closed down 1.5 percent at 7.38 euros on the Helsinki Stock Exchange while Alcatel-Lucent plunged more than 15 percent in Paris.

Mikko Ervasti, analyst at Evli Bank in Helsinki, said the deal puts Nokia among the global market leaders in networks.

“Nokia is clearly focusing on its networks operations and this acquisitio­n makes it a big enough player to clearly challenge Ericsson, perhaps even in several sectors,” he said.

The acquisitio­n has been approved by both boards and is expected to close in 2016 subject to regulatory and other approvals, including from shareholde­rs.

The combined company, known as Nokia Corp., will be based in Finland with “a strong presence in France,” Nokia said.

Nokia CEO Rajeev Suri was upbeat on the takeover, saying he firmly believes it is “the right deal, with the right logic, at the right time.”

But analysts warned that a crossover in operations would likely result in layoffs and cuts.

Ervasti described Alcatel-Lucent as a “sprawling” concern, and said Nokia might have to shed some operations.

“I think Nokia was interested in certain sectors of the company and had to bend over and make an offer for the whole lot,” he said.

Nokia said it aims to make savings of 900 million euros in “operating cost synergies” by 2019 and some 200 million euros reductions in interest expenses per year by 2017.

Alcatel- Lucent CEO Michel Combes admitted a “pang of sadness in the heart” at the demise of the Alcatel brand but defended the deal as focusing on “developmen­t and growth.”

“We had difficult periods, but now we are one of the building bricks for what will become a global technology giant,” he said on France’s Europe-1 radio. “Nokia is becoming today the leader of telecommun­ications networks thanks to Alcatel-Lucent.”

Combes also said that they are committed to keeping job levels the same in France and that the project would include 500 more research and developmen­t jobs in France.

Both companies’ chief executives met with French President Francois Hollande briefly on Tuesday afternoon, and the French government said it would support the deal.

Nokia, which began as a maker of paper and gum boots in 1865, transforme­d into a home electronic­s firm before becoming an innovator in the wireless industry and the world’s top cellphone maker. But it met its match when Apple launched the iPhone and also was unable to compete against Google Inc.’s Android operating system and cheaper handsets from Asia.

It has made a turnaround since the 5.4 billion-euro sale of the lossmaking handset business to Microsoft a year ago, with three remaining sectors: networks, HERE mapping services and technologi­es and patents. Nokia said Wednesday it is looking into the potential divestment of its HERE business, but gave no details.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nokia head offices are seen in Espoo, Finland, on Wednesday. Nokia confirmed Wednesday it is acquiring the ailing French telecom company Alcatel-Lucent through a public exchange offer in France and the United States in a bid to become a leading global...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nokia head offices are seen in Espoo, Finland, on Wednesday. Nokia confirmed Wednesday it is acquiring the ailing French telecom company Alcatel-Lucent through a public exchange offer in France and the United States in a bid to become a leading global...

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