Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
OTTAWA, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- Canada's Nortel Networks
Corp., one of the world's largest telecommunications equipment manufacturers,
filed for bankruptcy protection on Wednesday.
In a press release, the company said the global financial crisis had derailed its efforts to fix mistakes of the past and turn itself back into a profitable organization.
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The Nortel Networks Corporation logo is
shown outside their office building in Toronto January 14, 2009. Nortel ,
North America's biggest telephone equipment maker, filed for bankruptcy on
Wednesday, hoping to save a once high flying business whose decade-long
decline has accelerated with the global economic crisis.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Nortel, based in Toronto, said it has applied for
creditor protection under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) in
Canada. A hearing by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice is scheduled for
Wednesday afternoon.
The company's U.S. operations have also filed for
protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, and its European units
will make similar filings in Europe, the company said.
"The company's normal day-to-day operations are
expected to continue without interruption," Nortel said in the press release.
The telecom-hardware manufacturer failed to conclude
a deal to sell one of its divisions that was put up for sale in September, and
had faced the prospect of paying 107 million U.S. dollars of interest on its
debts on Thursday.
Some sources say the company has seen business
dropping significantly as customers worry about its future. Analysts expect
Nortel to lose significantly more business after the filing.
The company's already crushed shares plunged further
in European trading early Wednesday as investors absorbed the development,
falling to as little as the equivalent of 35.41 Canadian cents on the Frankfurt
Stock Exchange, before inching back to 37.66 cents, down 2.9 cents from
Tuesday's close. The shares were halted on the TSX and NYSE.
The filings on Wednesday could see what was once
Canada's great corporate success story broken up and sold to foreign rivals.
Nortel's storied history in the telecommunications
field dates back nearly as far as the telephone itself. The company was founded
in 1895 as Northern Electric Manufacturing Company to begin selling telephone
equipment to other companies as Canada built out its first telecom network.
Throughout the first half of the 20th century, the
company's telecom gear business grew steadily, but Nortel also built telegraphic
equipment used on the battlefields of the First World War as well as the first
sound system in Canada for talking movies.
In the 1950s, the company developed electromechanical
switches, a technology that would allow direct phone calls between cities.
Nortel was an early pioneer of satellite technologies in the 1960sand helped
build Canada's first cellular telephone networks.
Nortel's fortunes exploded with the dawn of the
Internet and the introduction of increasingly sophisticated modems and cellular
technologies. At its peak, this one company accounted for nearly one-third of
the total value of the TSX, as the company was worth more than all six big banks
combined.
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The Nortel Networks Corporation logo is
shown on their office building in Toronto January 14, 2009. Nortel , North
America's biggest telephone equipment maker, filed for bankruptcy on
Wednesday, hoping to save a once high flying business whose decade-long
decline has accelerated with the global economic crisis.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
