Nortel Networks' chief executive will examine potential takeover opportunities when they
arise, he told a German newspaper, but he declined to comment on media
reports of a unit merger with Motorola.
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Nortel Networks' chief executive will examine potential takeover opportunities when they
arise, he told a German newspaper, but he declined to comment on media
reports of a unit merger with Motorola.
"We are a normal company again, have doubled our expenses for
research and development and are spending less money on lawyers to deal
with accounting problems," Mike Zafirovski told Germany's Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung in an interview. An advance copy was released on
Wednesday.
"We are becoming more visible in the market again and can rely on
organic growth again. But if the right opportunity for an acquisition
arises, we will of course look at it. I can't say more on the issue of
Motorola," he told the paper.
Zafirovski would not comment on a report in the Wall Street Journal
on Monday that the company was in talks with Motorola — the world's
third-largest mobile phone maker — to combine their wireless
infrastructure units.
The paper had said the talks could create a joint venture with sales
of around $10 billion, combining businesses that make network equipment
for wireless phone carriers.
Any deal would follow a wave of mergers in the global
telecommunications sector, as equipment makers combine in a bid to gain
economies of scale and more pricing power against telephone carriers
that are also merging.
"It is important for us to stabilize the business and to make the company profitable again after difficult years," he added.
Since the end of the technology boom, Toronto-based Nortel, North
America's biggest telecoms equipment supplier, has been hit by tough
competition, cost-cutting, sector consolidation and internal problems,
including a series of financial restatements.
Zafirovski said Nortel aimed to reach a double-digit operating
margin without giving a specific time frame, as the company hopes to
benefit from a next-generation high-speed wireless network based on an
emerging technology known as Long Term Evolution (LTE) and WiMax, which
provides wireless broadband Internet access over large distances,
He added that services could account for up to 40 percent of its
business in the next three to four years, making up around 20 percent
at the moment.
(Reporting by Eva Kuehnen; Editing by Paul Bolding)
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