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Nokia bets on AI feuled data center boom in $2.3 billion Infinera deal

The takeover will value the optical telecommunications maker's equity at $6.65 per share, the companies said in a statement late on Thursday

Data center

Sales at Nokia and its rival Ericsson AB have been hit by a dramatic pullback in mobile network spending as the industry struggles to recoup investments.

Bloomberg

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By Jillian Deutsch, Liana Baker and Ryan Gould


Nokia Oyj has agreed to buy Infinera Corp. in a $2.3 billion deal that will expand the company’s networking products for data centers and increase its presence in the US, a potentially key source of growth as the boom in artificial intelligence drives demand for server capacity. 
 
“AI is driving significant investments in data centers at the moment, and one of the key attractions of this acquisition is that it significantly increases our exposure to data centers,” Nokia Chief Executive Officer Pekka Lundmark said in a call with reporters on Friday. 
 

Infinera’s exposure to “server-to-server communications” inside data centers is particularly attractive because that “will be one of the fastest growing segments in the overall communications technology market.”

The takeover will value the optical telecommunications maker’s equity at $6.65 per share, the companies said in a statement late on Thursday. At least 70% of the deal will be paid in cash, with the rest consisting of Nokia’s American depositary shares, according to the statement, which confirmed an earlier report by Bloomberg News. 

Infinera’s stock had risen 15% over the past 12 months, giving the company a market value of about $1.2 billion. The shares, which closed Thursday at $5.26 each, jumped about 20% in premarket trading on Friday before exchanges opened in the US. Nokia shares rose 1.1% to €3.54 at 12:11 p.m. in Helsinki. 

Sales at Nokia and its rival Ericsson AB have been hit by a dramatic pullback in mobile network spending as the industry struggles to recoup investments. Nokia also suffered a major blow when Ericsson secured a $14 billion contract with AT&T Inc. in December to build an OpenRAN network, a technology that’s more cloud friendly and opens networks up more than previous, heavily integrated solutions.

This deal, Nokia’s biggest since the €10.6 billion ($11.4 billion) takeover of Alcatel-Lucent in 2016, will help build up the fixed network business that the company expects will drive a pickup in the second half of the year as customers increase orders for technology used in cloud infrastructure.

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Infinera and its competitors have also been suffering from weaker spending. The company reported that revenue fell by about a third between the fourth quarter and first quarter this year and it swung to a net loss, missing analysts’ estimates in its May financial results. Larger rivals Cisco Systems Inc. and Ciena Corp. also reported contracting revenue in the most recent quarter. 

Still, Infinera said it won a significant new customer and CEO David Heard said the business is positioned to take advantage of key shifts in the industry, including the proliferation of data centers and AI workloads. 

“This is optimal timing, buying something just before the market starts to recover,” Lundmark said in an interview on Friday. “The optical market has been weak,” for the past two years though Nokia and analysts are predicting the market will recover in 2025, he said.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says:
 

Ciena and Cisco may face stiffer competition in the high-speed data-center interconnect market from a Nokia-Infinera combination. The deal gives Nokia market-leading high-speed optical technologies that position it better with cloud accounts, while alleviating Infinera’s balance-sheet concerns, giving it resources to acquire telecom and cloud customers.


Woo Jin Ho, BI Senior Industry Analyst for Technology


Nokia also said in a separate statement on Thursday that the French government planned to purchase its Alcatel Submarine Networks unit, which has an enterprise value of €350 million. The company, which largely operated independently and had a much longer sales cycle, did not fit well into the rest of Nokia’s operations, Lundmark said in an interview on Friday. The sale allows the company to focus and strengthen the network infrastructure unit.

PJT Partners served as financial adviser to Nokia, while Infinera was advised by Centerview Partners LLC.

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First Published: Jun 28 2024 | 10:13 PM IST

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