Huawei hires ex- official of Bush administration (USA)
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A prominent former Bush administration official has been recruited by Huawei who worked on national security issues. With this move, the Chinese telecoms equipment maker seeks to make inroads in Washington and assuage concerns that it has ties to the Chinese military. John Bellinger, a partner at Arnold & Porter has been hired as an adviser. He has served as chief attorney at the State Department and advised the National Security Council under George W. Bush.
The move also suggests that company is aggressively seeking to convince US defense and security officials that it should be allowed to make acquisitions in the US. Huawei wants to gain market share in the US by weighing a bid for a unit of Motorola. However, there are speculations that the company will move ahead with the bid only if it can be certain that the deal would not be blocked on national security grounds by the Obama administration. After getting the indication that Bush administration would block the transaction, Huawei was forced to abandon a joint bid for 3 Com in 2008. The Bush administration was understood to have resisted the deal because 3 Com was a supplier to the defense department
Takeovers of sensitive US assets by foreign companies might be blocked by an inter-agency panel called the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS) on national security grounds especially in the case of technology and telecom assets which are considered critical infrastructure and sensitive.
Any especially controversial foreign transactions have been confronted by the Obama administration though attorneys who work on such deals in Washington say it is only a matter of time before The White House faces a politically contentious bid by a non-US company. A Chinese buyer abandoned a bid for Firstgold, a US gold mining company based in Nevada in February after it was told by the Obama administration that the deal would be blocked.
Telecom New Zealand to sell off AAPT, receives for bids
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: AAPT, the Australian unit of Telecom New Zealand (Telecom) will be sold off by the company. Four bidders have already understood to be in contention for acquiring the operator. TPG Telecom, Pacnet, Quadrangle Group and Optus are the four contenders who have submitted offers before the April 15 deadline.
Drop in revenue has been cited as the reason behind Telecom decision to sell the unit with AAPT generating AUD760 million (USD700 million) in 2009, down from AUD1 billion a year earlier. Even the EBITDA were down by around AUD27 million over the same twelve-month period, at AUD73 million.
Earlier it was reported that USD420 million for AAPT has been announced by Pacnet, and according to the company, it was considering a number of possible acquisitions in Australia.
Tata’s Addepalli among 40 young leaders of telecom world: Survey
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Srinivasa Addepalli of Tata Communication has appeared as the only Indian in the list of the world’s 40 young leaders with a potential to drive the future course of the fast-growing global telecom industry. The result was announced in a survey in which respondents were asked who they thought are the global telecom industry’s “young leaders of today and the leaders of tomorrowâ€.
Addepalli, Tata Communication’s senior vice-president for corporate strategy. Google’s director of strategic alliances, Nick Heller, Expand Networks’ sales and marketing VP Adam Davison and BT’s chief financial officer, Richard Cameron are also named in the list.
Others featuring in the list of 40 individuals under the age of 40 years are British firm Vodafone’s Bryan Littlefair, South Africa-based MTN’s Khumo Shuenyane, UK-based MobileIQ’s Shaun Barriball, American entity AT&T’s Tom Regen and French company Alcatel-Lucent’s Heather Kirksey.
As per the survey, a domain expert in developing strategies and business plans in the Indian and global telecom sector, Addepalli is responsible for formulating and executing all new strategic initiatives, including growth plans, entry into new markets and mergers and acquisitions.
UMobile’s 2.37% stake to be purchased by Malaysia Multi-Purpose
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: In order to buy 2.37% stake in telecommunications company U Mobile Sdn. Bhd. for MYR54 million, an agreement has been signed between Malaysian diversified group Multi-Purpose Holdings Bhd and unlisted Detik Ria Sdn Bhd.
Having interests in gaming and financial services, Multi-Purpose has also separately completed an earlier agreement to buy a 1.98% stake in U Mobile from unlisted U Television Sdn. Bhd. for MYR75 million.
According to the group, it has also subscribed for an additional 1.98% stake in U Mobile for MYR15 million as part of an earlier one-for-one rights issue declared by U Mobile and the series of acquisitions amounts to a combined stake of 7.72% in U Mobile at a total cost of MYR144 million.
France Telecom’s new CEO rules out major purchases
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Any possibility of making any major acquisitions in the short term has been ruled out by France Telecom’s (FT’s) incoming chief executive officer Stephane Richard, who will replace Didier Lombard from 1 March 2010. However, he also expressed his plan to seek out opportunities to grow in Europe through joint ventures.
According to Richard, the firm will soon publish its eagerly awaited plan for the deployment of high speed broadband networks in France.
Bharti Airtel considering bid for Millicom SL
Bharti Airtel CEO, Manoj Kohli told reporters in India that Airtel may bid for Millicom’s Sri Lankan operation. Bharti already operates in SL.
Wireless Federation had earlier reported that Millicom/Tigo Laos has been sold to Russia’s Vimpelcom.
Bharti is actively considering acquisitions in Africa and the world over after the talks with MTN collapsed.
Bharti group CEO Sunil Mittal has said that the company won’t engage in dialogue with MTN for a third time, after inconclusive talks twice.
Nasdaq-listed Millicom provides prepaid cellular telephony services to over 30 million customers in 16 emerging markets in Latin America, Africa and Asia.
Asked if Bharti Airtel was also interested in Kuwait’s Zain Telecom, Kohli said they will continue to explore international acquisitions. (Airtel-Zain, See Here)
Big scope seen in data service expansion for Canadian mobile phone operators
(CP) -
‘s mobile-phone industry has vast room to grow in data services for businesses and consumers, the president of the country’s biggest cellphone operator said Tuesday.
Nadir Mohamed of Rogers Communications Inc. (TSX:RCI.B) told a BMO Capital Markets media and telecom conference that at business forums such as Tuesday’s event 95 per cent of those present typically have mobile-e-mail devices, mostly BlackBerrys made by Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM). But he estimated only five per cent of businesspeople who could profit from constant e-mail access have it.
“There’s lots of room for e-mail connectivity and applications on the business side,” he said.
“On the consumer side it’s been fuelled by SMS (short message service),” he added.
“Both sides of the equation are growing and in my mind will continue to grow significantly.”
In terms of transmitting video to mobile devices, “the noise we’re making is more about the brand,” Mohamed said, and “video is some time away from being a meaningful contributor” to revenue.
In the wake of Monday’s announcement by Telus Corp. (TSX:T) that it will become an income trust, Mohamed said Rogers has no similar plans – primarily because it won’t have to pay income tax in the foreseeable future thanks to almost $4 billion in accumulated tax losses.
He added that paying a high dividend is not a priority for Toronto-headquartered
‘s largest cable-television operator as well as the biggest wireless provider.
“Clearly the focus is paying down our debt – that’s goal No. 1,” he said. “We’re not going to go from a growth company to a yield company anytime soon.”
Meanwhile, the country’s largest telephone company,
(TSX:BCE), continues to struggle with “service issues in the consumer segment,” George Cope,
‘s new president and chief operating officer, acknowledged at the meeting.
Bell has geared up for competition from cable-TV operators and others in local telephone service after generations as a monopoly and it has “an unbelievably reliable local access service,” he declared, but it remains hamstrung by “ridiculous” federal regulations.
“The last time I looked I don’t think
needs our help in terms of their financial position by the regulator,” he said.
Still, he acknowledged, “our customer service has to improve, and it’s a very tricky balance as you’re taking costs out there.”
Cope, the former president of Telus Mobility who joined Bell in January, said it’s too early to know whether erosion of Bell’s local access line business has hit bottom, but “now for the first time (competitors) have churn, not just us,” while Bell remains “the clear leader in the enterprise segment.”
Asked about the income trust issue, Cope noted that rural phone operations were spun off this summer in the Bell Aliant Regional Communications Income Fund (TSX:BA.UN) and he repeated a previous statement that “management and the board continue to review the suitability of the income trust structure” for the rest of the enterprise.
“That’s all I’m saying.”
Also at Tuesday’s conference, Marc Tellier, president and CEO of Yellow Pages Group (TSX:YLO.UN), said the trust’s “big focus is really to integrate one national platform” after a series of acquisitions ranging from the Trader Canada group of advertising publications to the MTS Media phone-book operation in Manitoba.
“It’s not that it’s difficult work, it’s just that there’s a lot of wood to chop” in such tasks as consolidating eight accounting and human resources systems, Tellier said.
Yellow Pages is also working to expand its clientele by attracting more national advertisers, which “typically don’t come to us in droves,” he said.
Tellier added that the trust now has “a much more compelling value equation for national advertisers” such as automotive companies which he said account for one-fifth of all advertising in the
.
Source- http://money.canoe.ca
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