Nokia is discussing internally whether to approach
French rival Alcatel-Lucent about a tie-up, part of the Finnish company's
review of how it can grow after the planned sale of its handset business to
Microsoft Corp, several people close to the matter said.
No formal talks are underway with Alcatel-Lucent, the
sources said. One of the people close to the matter said Nokia held "on
again, off again" discussions about buying Alcatel's wireless business as
recently as late 2012 and that the two companies could still come back to the
table.
Speculation over a combination between Nokia and
Alcatel-Lucent goes back several years, as both have struggled to compete with
market leader Ericsson and low-cost Asian network equipment rivals Huawei and
ZTE.
Microsoft announced on September 3 that it will buy
Nokia's phone business and license its patents for 5.44 billion euros. Nokia
has said it will evaluate strategy for its remaining operations before the deal
closes. Those businesses include a mapping software unit called HERE and a
portfolio of patents.
The Finnish phone maker once dominated the global
market but has had its mobile business ravaged by nimbler rivals Apple Inc and
Samsung Electronics.
Nokia, under the leadership of interim CEO Risto
Siilasmaa, has already begun internal discussions on future strategy, the
sources said, adding that a decision could be months away.
All the sources asked not to be identified because they
were not authorized to speak with the media.
Representatives for Nokia, its network equipment unit,
Nokia Solutions and Networks, and Alcatel-Lucent declined to comment.
Nokia is in a "period of reflection trying to
figure out what they want to do," one of the sources said. They said there
were possibilities for Nokia such as having "the option to buy the entire
Alcatel-Lucent, or just the wireless business ... Nothing is imminent."
Proceeds from Microsoft deal
Any formal dialogue around a combination would likely
be held after Nokia receives proceeds from the Microsoft deal, which is expected
to strengthen its financial position and boost its credit rating to investment
grade from junk status, the people close to the matter said.
The Microsoft deal would leave Nokia with its Nokia
Solutions and Networks unit as the main business generating around 90 % of the
company's sales.
The most likely deal may be for Nokia to buy Alcatel's
wireless division, which includes a big presence in the lucrative U.S. market
where NSN has traditionally been weak, one of the sources said. That would
leave Alcatel-Lucent to focus its fast-growing IP routing and optical business,
the person said.
Analysts put the value of Alcatel's wireless business
at between 1.1 billion euros to 1.5 billion euros.
A combination with Alcatel-Lucent would increase NSN's
market share in the global wireless infrastructure market from 18 % to more
than 30 percent, leapfrogging Huawei and closing in on Ericsson, according to
analyst data.
While telecommunications operators around the world
have been upgrading their infrastructure in response to consumer demand for
faster mobile Internet connections, equipment makers have been under pressure
to sell more for less.
The pressure led to a round of mergers in 2006 and
2007, out of which were born Alcatel-Lucent and Nokia Siemens Networks.
NSN, which was a joint venture between Nokia and
Siemens from 2007 until Nokia bought out the German company's stake in early
July, announced in 2011 that it would focus on wireless network infrastructure
to help turn the company around.
It has since shed more than a quarter of its workforce,
and by the end of 2012 it was contributing to Nokia's cash flow instead of
draining it.
Alcatel-Lucent, which has been unable to post regular
profits and generate cash since 2006, also announced a new restructuring plan
in June, under its new chief executive Michel Combes.
Nokia is likely to be highly cautious when considering
any kind of offer for Alcatel-Lucent.
With shares of the French company up about 130 % this
year, the Alcatel chief executive is currently not in any rush to strike a
deal, the sources said.
There were other issues that could stand in the way of
a deal, such as the risk of intervention by the French government to protect
Alcatel or limit job cuts, one of the sources familiar with Nokia's thinking
said. The French state owns 3.6 % of Alcatel-Lucent.
Nokia also may not be the only company interested in
buying some of Alcatel's assets. Other network equipment makers such as Juniper
Networks and Ericsson have also recently eyed Alcatel-Lucent or some of its assets,
one of the sources said.
Ericsson and Juniper declined to comment.
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