France’s stock market regulatory body said today that Finnish telecom group Nokia’s all-share offer for French-American rival Alcatel-Lucent had been successful.

Nokia now holds around 76 per cent of shares and voting rights in Alcatel, the French financial market authority, AMF, said in a provisional report.

It said the “minimal condition” for Nokia to control at least 50 per cent of shares and voting rights had been “satisfied“.

“The offer therefore is proceeding positively,” the French regulator said, adding that its final report was due tomorrow at the latest.

Once the world’s top mobile phone maker, Nokia hopes the merger will help it become the world’s number one network equipment and service provider.

The acquisition will allow Nokia to expand from telecoms networks to Internet networks and “cloud” services to better compete with its global rivals, the Swedish group Ericsson and Huawei of China.

The merged group eyes a combined revenue of nearly 25 billion euros (USD 27.3 billion).

Nokia’s shareholders gave their consent in early December to the offer which has sparked fears of job cuts among staff both in Finland and France.

Under the public exchange offer, Nokia offered 0.55 Nokia shares for each Alcatel-Lucent share.

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