Nokia will buy Alcatel-Lucent in $16.6B deal
Nokia
said it is to buy Alcatel-Lucent in a deal that values the
France-based company at €15.6 billion ($16.6 billion) and creates a
new European powerhouse in the telecoms equipment market.
In
a joint announcement on
Wednesday, the companies said they have signed a memorandum of
understanding under which Nokia will make an offer for all of the
equity securities issued by Alcatel-Lucent through a public exchange
offer in France and in the United States.
Under
the terms of the deal, Nokia will give Alcatel-Lucent shareholders
0.55 shares in the combined company for each of their old shares. If
the public exchange offer is fully taken up, Nokia would own 66.5 per
cent of the combined company and Alcatel-Lucent 33.5 per cent.
The
combined company will be called Nokia Corporation, with headquarters
in Finland and a strong presence in France. In addition to creating a
new European equipment powerhouse, the move places both companies in
a stronger position to compete with market leader Ericsson and
Chinese rivals Huawei and ZTE.
"The
combined company will be uniquely positioned to create the foundation
of seamless connectivity for people and things wherever they are.
This foundation is essential for enabling the next wave of
technological change, including the Internet of Things and transition
to the cloud," Nokia and Alcatel-Lucent said in a statement.
The
companies stress that they have "highly complementary
portfolios" and geographies, with particular strength in the
United States, China, Europe and Asia-Pacific. Nokia estimates the
addressable market of the combined company in 2014 was about 50 per
cent larger than the current addressable networks market for Nokia
alone.
Ovum
analyst Mark Newman said the merger of the two businesses seems
logical. "Nokia is a mobile-only equipment vendor, while
Alcatel-Lucent's strengths are in the fixed network business
(especially core network and IP routing). It has long-struggled in
the wireless business, and its attempts to become a leading player in
LTE have failed," he said.
He
noted that the planned merger has been driven by a number of factors
including the consolidation of operators across the globe and the
move towards 5G. He added that the new Nokia planned to help
operators realise their quad-play ambitions by providing converged
mobile and fixed broadband technology, IP routing, core networking,
and cloud applications.
Alcatel-Lucent
CEO Michel Combes said he is convinced this is a "powerful
project" with long-term value potential.
The
transaction is scheduled to close in the first half of 2016 subject
to approval from the relevant bodies, and is expected to result in
€900 million of operating cost savings by the end of 2019. It's not
yet clear how many job cuts might be required to achieve cost savings
targets, but the company is also planning to achieve these cuts
through savings in procurement and other costs.
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