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Nortel now 'finished' with GSM sale: Forrester

Nortel now 'finished' with GSM sale: Forrester

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 25 Nov 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Ericsson and Kapsch AG have agreed to buy GSM wireless assets from financially-troubled Nortel. Most of the 350 employees Ericsson wants to hire would be based in the U.S. Nortel has arranged to sell its carrier wireless, enterprise, optical networking and metropolitan Ethernet units.

Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson has agreed to buy another piece of Nortel Networks Corp.’s carrier wireless business for US$70 million.

 

Toronto-based Nortel announced Wednesday Ericsson was one of the winning bidders of an auction of Nortel’s Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) business.
 
On Nov. 13, Ericsson closed the acquisition of Nortel’s other carrier wireless assets, including the code division multiple access (CDMA) base stations and licensing of the Long Term Evolution (LTE) patents.  In Canada, Ericsson has hired about 900 Nortel CDMA workers, and another 1,600 elsewhere.
 
 
"What was Nortel is finished," said Brownlee Thomas, Montreal-based principal analyst at Forrester Research Inc. "It’s gone."

 

The other company acquiring Nortel GSM assets in the deal announced Wednesday is Vienna-based Kapsch AG, which is paying US$30 million. If approved by courts and regulators, Ericsson would get Nortel’s North American GSM assets while Kapsch would get those units in Taiwan.

 
The US$103 million sale is part of Nortel’s efforts to sell its major business units to pay billions back to creditors, including corporate bond holders, former employees waiting for severance payments and pension funds. Nortel entered bankruptcy protection Jan. 14 after losing money most years since 1998.

 

Nortel and the buyers are scheduled to seek court approval of the deal Dec. 2. Kapsch and Ericsson plan to offer jobs to a total of 680 Nortel workers worldwide.

Of those, Ericsson Canada president Mark Henderson estimated fewer than 10 would be based in Canada.

"This really pertains to the existing GSM business in North America and that is in the United States," Henderson said. "Along with the recent acquisition of (Nortel) CDMA and LTE, the emphasis is on Ericsson’s commitment to the North American market.”
 
Thomas said the deal could lead to opportunities for Ericsson Canada down the road.
 
"They didn’t get anything in this for Canada but they use it to leverage their way in," she said. "The biggest opportunity would be to help Bell and Telus with going to the next level," referring to their high-speed packet access (HSPA) network, which was completed earlier this month.
 
 

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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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