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Nortel wireless workers best served by NSN buy: Analyst

Nortel wireless workers best served by NSN buy: Analyst

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 15 Jul 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Sue Spradley, leader of Nokia Siemens Networks for North America, talked to the Economic Club of Canada about the agreement to buy Nortel’s carrier wireless business. Find out what industry analysts Ronald Gruia and Michelle Warren have to say

As rumours circulate of Nortel bondholders working on a deal to keep the company from breaking up and being sold off to competitors, the prime contender to buy its carrier wireless business says a foreign acquisition is the best option.

“We hear the stories about private equity wanting to come in and save Nortel,” said Sue Spradley, head of North American operations for Nokia Siemens Networks. “Believe me, I would like to save Nortel if it could be saved. Unfortunately this is a very difficult global environment.”

Spradley made her remarks to the Economic Club of Canada Tuesday at the Sutton Place Hotel in Toronto.


She joined Espoo, Finland-based Nokia Siemens Networks two years ago and is a former president of Nortel global services and operations.

The companies announced June 19 an agreement in which Nokia Siemens Networks would acquire for US$650 million Nortel’s carrier wireless business, which manufactures equipment using code division multiple access (CDMA) technologies and is also developing Long Term Evolution (LTE) products.

When it announced the agreement with Nokia Siemens Networks, Nortel also said it is in “advanced discussions” with other companies to sell its other units, including the enterprise division and the metropolitan Ethernet assets.

Since then, New York investment firm MatlinPatterson, which reportedly owns more than US$400 million worth of Nortel bonds, has said it wants to see Nortel continue operating, rather than sell off all of its units to competitors. Toronto-based Nortel, which has lost money nearly every year since 1997, has been operating under bankruptcy protection since Jan. 14.

“They’re working hard to stop the proposed sale to Nokia Siemens of the crown jewel of Nortel, which is the wireless communications division, in order to try to enable Nortel to reorganize their key businesses and hopefully emerge from bankruptcy protection,” Ronald Gruia, the Toronto-based Program Leader for emerging telecoms, at Frost & Sullivan, said in an earlier phone interview.

Matlin Patterson has refused to comment to Network World Canada.

The agreement with Nokia Siemens Networks – which is contingent upon Nokia Siemens Networks offering jobs to 2,500 Nortel employees – is a “stalking horse” bid, which means other firms could table offers of their own. The deadline for other bids is next Tuesday, and if anyone else does present a competing offer, a 24-hour auction is scheduled July 24.

Spradley said the Nokia Siemens Networks deal, if it goes through, will give employees peace of mind.

“They will start out from Day 1 knowing who their boss is, what their pay is, what their job is – versus waiting for the next shoe to drop,” Spradley said. “We’re the only bidder who can say that today with confidence.”

Gruia said if Matlin Patterson is able to acquire Nortel, either on its own or with others, the firm must act quickly.


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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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