Nokia downplays shareholder opposition to Alcatel-Lucent deal

Reuters Updated - December 07, 2021 at 02:22 AM.

A woman holds a smartphone in front of a screen displaying both Nokia and Alcatel Lucent logos in this photo illustration in Paris. Nokia Oyj is in talks to buy Alcatel-Lucent. File Photo

Nokia Chief Executive Rajeev Suri defended the terms of its pending acquisition of smaller telecom gear maker Alcatel-Lucent after a shareholder criticised them as unacceptable.

Odey Asset Management, Alcatel-Lucent's second-largest shareholder with 5 per cent, said in a letter to investors that it would not tender its shares in the Nokia takeover because the 15.6 billion euro price in the all-share deal was too low, according to the Financial Times newspaper.

"We've met many investors in the last couple weeks, and there's very strong, good feedback," Suri said on a call after first-quarter results.

He declined to say whether the terms of the deal would be altered, adding only that both boards had already approved them. "Fundamentally this is a good deal with attractive upside in long-term and upfront."

Alcatel-Lucent shareholders do not need to vote to ratify the deal since it will go through as long as 51 per cent of shares are tendered.

Published on April 30, 2015 07:43