Ericsson CFO Jan Frykhammar
revealed to Total Telecom this week that the company would consider acquiring
assets from rival Nokia Siemens Networks – provided they were up for sale.
"If they put out assets for
sale and there comes official processes, I think our responsibility... is – if
we are invited to have a look – [to] look at them," he said on the
sidelines of Ericsson's fourth quarter results presentation on Wednesday.
"If we see that an asset can
add value to our company we consider acquiring it," he continued, citing
recent examples including Ericsson's $1.15 billion purchase of Telcordia in
June 2011 and its participation in the consortium that bought Nortel's patent portfolio
a month later for $4.5 billion.
A GigaOM report on Wednesday also
linked the Swedish kit vendor with a move for Canadian WiFi specialist BelAir
networks.
However, Frykhammar insisted
Ericsson is not specifically planning to buy parts of NSN.
"As a leadership team we do
not speculate on consolidation," he said. "If assets are available we
look at them; whether we go and acquire assets, that's completely
different."
Nokia Siemens Networks in November
announced plans to refocus the business entirely on mobile broadband and divest
or manage for value any assets that fall outside that remit. The move will see
17,000 jobs cut in a bid to reduce costs by €1 billion.
So far NSN has offloaded its WiMAX business to Skyview Capital-owned
NewNet Communication Technologies, and its fixed broadband access division to
network specialist Adtran for undisclosed fees.(C) Total Telecom
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