Will they or won’t they? France-based Alcatel and N.J.-based Lucent, both major providers of telecommunications equipment, are in merger talks again — this time to the tune of $33 billion.



When we last left our erstwhile couple, they had abandoned the altar and a $23.5 billion merger back in 2001 over disagreements of who would wear the pants in the family. This time around, the two telecommunications companies are talking about a “merger of equals” priced at market. The move would definitely be beneficial for Alcatel; merging with Lucent, Alcatel would have better access to communication carriers in the U.S. market. Lucent would benefit from uniting with a company with a decided technological advantage.



Still, industry watchers are having a tough time seeing how, exactly, the two companies will be able to achieve this “merger of equals.” In the intervening five years, Alcatel has beefed up its technological infrastructure; Lucent, on the other hand, has struggled financially, resorting to waves of layoffs. Lucent does benefit from still being the leading U.S. provider of wireless networking gear. Jeffries International, a New York-based investment firm, bidding adieu to any invitation to the wedding, told Market Watch, “We believe a merger between Alcatel and Lucent carries the same clunky rationale as when it was first attempted in 2001, industry consolidation at the expense of inevitable disruption.”


For more on this story, please visit Lucent, Alcatel talking $33 bln merger.


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