Nokia agrees deal to buy Alcatel

Finnish telecom network equipment maker Nokia has agreed to buy Alcatel-Lucent in an all-share transaction that values its smaller French rival at £11.23bn.

Nokia will give Alcatel-Lucent shareholders 0.55 shares in the combined company for each of their old shares, resulting in 33.5 per cent of the entity being in Alcatel’s hands and Nokia having 66.5 per cent if the public exchange offer is fully taken up.

The deal will be finalised in the first half of 2016 and is expected to result in 900 million euros of operating cost savings by the end of 2019, the companies said.

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Nokia pledged to keep France as “a vibrant centre of the combined company” and not to cut jobs beyond what Alcatel had already planned, especially protecting research and development sites at Villarceaux and Lannion.

Alcatel-Lucent has some 6,000 employees in France. Maintaining jobs was a key demand of the French state for its backing of the deal.

Nokia’s takeover of Alcatel-Lucent will help it, better, take on mobile leader Sweden’s Ericsson and low-cost powerhouse China’s Huawei amid weak growth prospects in the telecom gear industry.

It will have stronger exposure to the important North American market, with key contracts with AT&T and Verizon and a fast-growing internet routing business.

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“The combined company is expected to have a stronger growth profile than Nokia’s current addressable market,” Nokia said, predicting a sales growth rate of about 3.5 per cent for 2014 to 2019.

The combined company will have a global wireless market share of 35 percent, second only to Ericsson with 40 percent, and ahead of Huawei at 20 percent, according to Bernstein Research.

The revamped Nokia board will have nine or ten members, with three, including the vice-chairman, from Alcatel-Lucent.

Nokia shares fell as much as 7 per cent on Tuesday after its interest in loss-making Alcatel-Lucent was announced. The French firm leaped 16 per cent.

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The company will have about 114,000 employees and combined sales of around 26 billion euros.

Nokia sold its once-dominant handset business last year after struggling to compete with smartphones by Apple and Samsung. That deal left it with the network unit, a smaller map unit and a bunch of technology patents.

JPMorgan advised Nokia on the takeover, and boutique investment bank Zaoui & Co. advised Alcatel-Lucent.

Separately, Nokia confirmed it was exploring the sale of its HERE mapping unit, which analysts value at up to 6.9 billion euros.

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