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Will anti-trust issues derail Avaya-Nortel deal?

Will anti-trust issues derail Avaya-Nortel deal? By:  Greg Meckbach On: 14 Sep 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Whether the U.S. Department of Justice approves Nortel’s agreement to sell its enterprise business to Avaya depends on which segments of the networking market the regulator examines. Find out what analyst Ronald Gruia and Liberal MP Marc Garneau have to say about the US$915 million agreement



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The U.S. government could still block Nortel Networks Corp.’s agreement to sell its enterprise business to Avaya Inc., but probably won’t, a Canadian analyst suggested.

“Avaya has an out clause if they don’t meet the regulatory requirements,” said Ronald Gruia, Toronto-based program leader for emerging telecoms at research firm Frost & Sullivan. “They could walk away from the deal.”

Toronto-based Nortel announced Monday Avaya Inc. of Basking Ridge, N.J. has agreed to buy Nortel’s enterprise business for US$915 million. Nortel, which has been operating under bankruptcy protection since January, is planning to sell off most of its assets.

In July it agreed to sell its carrier wireless unit to LM Ericsson of Sweden. That deal has been approved by bankruptcy courts but may be subject to a review from Industry Canada.

The Liberals have asked Prime Minister Stephen Harper to ensure the government reviews the agreement to sell the wireless business to Ericsson. The Liberals did not ask the government to actually block that sale.

“Our position (on the Avaya agreement) is identical to the position we took with respect to the wireless,” said Marc Garneau, Liberal Member of Parliament for the Montreal riding of Westmount Ville-Marie, who also serves as his party’s industry critic.

“This was a transaction valued at US$900 million,” Garneau said. “Therefore it needs to be reviewed under the Investment Canada Act.”

The ICA requires Industry Canada to review all foreign acquisitions valued at more than $312 million.

Nortel officials expect bankruptcy courts to approve the deal Tuesday. But Gruia noted the U.S. Justice Department’s Anti-Trust division still has to review it.

“The key issue is the DoJ rubber stamp,” Gruia said, adding the regulator would examine the market power a combined Avaya-Nortel company would have, compared to other major vendors such as San Jose, Calif.-based Cisco Systems Inc.

“If you look at it from a high level, if you combine the (small and mid-sized) products with enterprise, and you look at North America … chances are the DoJ would approve, he said. “But if you start slicing and dicing the market, if you look at large enterprises only, Avaya, nortel and Cisco together would have a much bigger chunk if the overall market.”

Gruia said Avaya and Nortel would have more than 42 per cent of the market if you account only for the contact centre products.

“If they start slicing and dicing, it may force Avaya to dispose of the Nortel Symposium products,” he said, referring to the Nortel server and associated products designed to route phone calls and messaging in corporate call centres.

Lynn Newman, Avaya’s media relations director, said “it is too early to discuss the portfolio” of products. Avaya first announced its intent to acquired Nortel’s enterprise assets in July, when it placed a “stalking horse” bid of US$475 million.


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Tags: Nortel, Avaya
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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