Telecom equipment maker Nortel said on July 20 it reached a deal to sell its enterprise solutions business to Avaya for $475 million pending approval of a bankruptcy court.
The deal, to be submitted to a U.S. bankruptcy judge overseeing the restructuring of Nortel, includes the North American, Caribbean and Latin America and Asia operations and a portion of the Europe, Middle East and Africa operations, Nortel said.
"We continue to be fully focused on running our operations and continuing to serve our customers while actively engaged in the sale of our businesses," said Nortel chief executive Mike Zafirovski. "We have determined that the sale of our businesses maximizes value while preserving innovation platforms, customer relationships and jobs to the greatest extent possible."
Once Canada's largest company, Nortel has been struggling since the dot.com collapse. It filed for bankruptcy protection in both the U.S. and Canada in January as it faced some $107 million in interest on its debt. The company lost $3.4 billion U.S. dollars in the third quarter of 2008 and saw revenues fall 14%.
Last year, Nortel said it was slashing 2,100 jobs mostly in North America and would transfer another 1,000 jobs to lower-cost countries, following deep losses.
Nortel, which did business in 150 countries and had about 26,000 employees around the world in February, traces its history back to 1882 as the mechanical department of Bell Telephone Canada.
In June, Nortel agreed to sell most of its wireless business to Nokia Siemens Networks for $650 million.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2009