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Ciena Opens Bidding for Nortel Optical, Ethernet Units

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Ciena Opens Bidding for Nortel Optical, Ethernet Units

Ciena pay wind up paying considerably more than the $521 million it has offered for Nortel's valuable optical networking and Ethernet business units, if history is a guide. Earlier "stalking horse" bids for Nortel properties were topped -- in some cases, nearly doubled -- before the deals were closed.


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Ciena (Nasdaq: CIEN) is offering cash and stock worth US$521 million to acquire some of Nortel's (NYSE: NT) most-prized remaining business units as the fallen telecommunications company continues to liquidate.

The deal Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse announced Wednesday covers the Nortel Optical Networking and Carrier Ethernet businesses, which have been considered among the best assets yet to be sold by Nortel.

Nortel said its agreement with Ciena calls for the Linthicum, Md.-based company to offer jobs to at least 2,000 employees, or more than 85 percent of the total at Nortel's Optical Networking and Carrier Ethernet business units.

However, there's no guarantee the deal will close as announced since Ciena's offer will be used as an opening bid for an auction by Nortel.

Higher Price to Come?

In previous auctions of Nortel business units this year, the final prices have been substantially higher than the initial "stalking horse" bids.

In this case, Ciena is offering $390 million in cash and 10 million shares of Ciena common stock. The shares are currently worth about $131 million.

Nortel, a former telecommunications equipment giant that at one point accounted for one-third of the market value on the entire Toronto Stock Exchange, filed for bankruptcy protection in Canada and the U.S. in January.

The Toronto-based company has been selling its operations piece by piece.

Last month, Nortel announced its Enterprise Solutions division would be sold to New Jersey-based Avaya for $900 million. Avaya had originally bid $475 million in July but sweetened the offer to win an auction that began Sept. 11 and lasted several days.

Prior to that, LM Ericsson (Nasdaq: ERICY) of Sweden agreed to pay $1.13 billion for Nortel's wireless network business, beating a $650 million stalking horse bid put forward by Nokia (NYSE: NOK) Siemens (NYSE: SI), a joint venture between Finland's Nokia and Germany's Siemens.

2,000 Nortel Jobs Preserved

Philippe Morin, president of Nortel Metro Ethernet Networks, said that Nortel's employees have done a "tremendous job stabilizing our business" and the company is "particularly pleased" that a significant number of them will be offered jobs with Ciena. The addition of 2,000 employees from Nortel would roughly double the size of Ciena's global workforce.

"This is a unique and exciting opportunity for us to accelerate our existing strategy Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales and the pace of our growth plans by two to three years," Gary Smith, Ciena's CEO and president, said in a statement.

Ciena shares rose 48 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $13.53 in morning trading Wednesday in New York.

© 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
© 2009 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.


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