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Nortel files for bankruptcy protection

Nortel files for bankruptcy protection

By:  Howard Solomon and Shane Schick  On: 13 Jan 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

One of Canada's most successful technology firms becomes a major casualty of the worldwide recession, with speculation about being broken up or sold to foreign rivals

Nortel might be broken up or sold to foreign rivals. It has been trying for months to sell its Metro Ethernet division. Fabbi believes it will sell its carrier equipment division and concentrate on enteprise products.

Another possibility is the company will be bought by a private equity company which will try to save it, again likely by focussing on the enterprise. Fabbi said one experienced IT buyer might be the U.S. equity team of Silver Lake and TPG Capital, which owns telecom equipment maker Avaya Inc. A merger between the two equipment makers is possible, but there would be some overlap in product lines between Avaya and Nortel that would have to be resolved.

Another possible private buyer, Fabbi speculated, might be Gores Group of Los Angeles, which owns Siemens Enterprise Communications. However, he noted that Nortel's products completely overlap with those of Siemens.

For weeks financial analysts have been wondering about Nortel's future among enterprise customers. Juniper Networks has the most to gain from Nortel's tenuous financial position, according to a bulletin issued this month by investment firm Oppenheimer & Co.

Juniper is aggressively recruiting Nortel's channel partners, and Nortel has reportedly received bids for its Metro Ethernet Networks business, which the company put on the block in September, and may be looking to sell off more businesses.

"We believe recent reports that Nortel is contemplating bankruptcy are likely to force its enterprise channel to look for new alternati








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Howard Solomon and Shane Schick Howard Solomon and Shane Schick is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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nortel networks is in a heap of trouble. the networking vendor just announced plans to terminate 1,300 workers and prospects for growth are thin after posting a net loss of us$3.4 billion for the third quarter.while i don’t believe in layoffs as a business strategy, i certainly understand why nortel is doing this. they have to stop the
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