Insights into events shaping up the future of technology
Ronald Gruia

Besides authoring this blog, Ronald is a Senior Strategic Analyst with Frost & Sullivan. Comments are open and unmoderated, although obscene or abusive remarks may be deleted. Opinions expressed by Ronald are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of his employer.

Copyright © 2006
Ronald Gruia
All rights reserved
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Toronto Weather
The WeatherPixie
This Month
September 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30
Year Archive
Technology Futurist Listings:

Blogarama - The Blog Directory

Listed on BlogsCanada





Globe of Blogs

Submit Your Blog To The Ultimate Blog Directory Today!

Listed on BlogShares

Listed on Blogwise

Listed on BlogSearchEngine.com

Listed on Bloggernity.com

Listed on Blizg.com

Listed on The Weblog 
Review

O Ponto de Encontro dos Blogueiros do Brasil



View Article  Alcatel, Cisco Pursue Italtel

According to Italian business news daily Il Sole 24 Ore, rival telecom equipment makers Alcatel (NYSE:ALA) and Cisco (Nasdaq:CSCO) are both interested in acquiring a majority stake in Italian softswitch vendor Italtel SpA.  Italtel reported a 2003 net loss of €24.2 million on sales of €691.2 million. 

As reported on that daily on Tuesday, US private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier and Rice, which has owned the stake (48.8 percent) for more than four years, now wants to sell it after the company put plans for an initial public offering (IPO) on hold due to market conditions.  Alcatel has made an offer for the stake and Cisco, which already owns 18.4 percent of Italtel, has indicated it wants to increase its shareholding.

Italtel's main client is Telecom Italia (NYSE:IT), which accounts for 65 percent of its revenues and holds 19.37 percent of its capital.  According to the article, the Italian telco has no preference between Alcatel and Cisco and only wants Italtel to be "effective and competitive".


Two great sources on this story are a Light Reading (The Daily Payload) article and a piece written by Om Malik on his blog, Om Malik on Broadband.  The Daily Payload entry examines the various pros and cons for Cisco and Alcatel to make the acquisition.  Om, as usual, is a step ahead of the curve and looks at the final outcome, believing that the loser of the Italtel sweepstakes might go after another softswitch vendor (his guess is Veraz Networks).    more »
View Article  LG Electronics Latest Info & Results

The results for the quarter ending June 30 are in and LG Electronics posted a strong performance, with net income increasing from roughly 494.4 billion won (about $427 million) versus 267.3 billion a year ago.

More remarkably, handset unit sales grew 89 percent from a year ago, to 9.94 million sets.  The strength continued in August, when LGE (LGEAF: Other OTC) registered a significant increase in 3G and US GSM phones.  Quarter-to-August handset shipment rose to 24.9% QoQ (or about 7.8 million units).  LGE has been one of the few global handset makers that have achieved sequential shipment growth and market share gains.  Apparently LGE and a few other Japanese players have been outpacing the large handset manufacturers (Nokia, Motorola and Samsung) in the 3G arena.  Smith Barney pegs LGE's global market share in the 3G segment at 26 percent, which is quite impressive.  Perhaps some observers did under-estimate LGE's strong 3G performance.  In Europe, for instance, LGE has a good presence (e.g. Hutchison 3, a leading W-CDMA operator).


Note: Telecoms Korea recently had a post about rumors that LG will reportedly sell its communication unit (except the handset division) to either Nortel or Cisco.  Since I do not own a subscription to the site, I could not dig deeper into the story, but all my Google news searches have turned up empty thus far - any info will be much appreciated.   more »
Search
Google logoSearch Google
Technology Futurist Visitors
Stock Markets
Dow Jones
DJIA
NASDAQ
NASDAQ
TSX
TSX
BlogMap
Take the MIT Weblog Survey




Powered By: