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Telent plc

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telent plc is a radio, telecommunication, and internet equipment manufacturing company. Telent was formed in 2005 and represents the UK and German services businesses of Marconi Corporation plc, the bulk of which was acquired by Ericsson on October 25 2005. Marconi Corporation plc was previously known as The General Electric Company (until 1999) and Marconi plc (1999-2003).

Marconi Corporation should not be confused with the Marconi Company founded by Guglielmo Marconi. That company became part of English Electric in 1946, itself bought by GEC in 1968. The Marconi Company became the defence division inside the GEC conglomerate and the name was widely used, for example Marconi Electronic Systems and the joint ventures Alenia Marconi Systems and Matra Marconi Space.

History

formerly Marconi Plc Corporate Logo
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formerly Marconi Plc Corporate Logo
Marconi plc was formed following a major reorganisation of GEC. Beginning in December 1998 reports emerged that GEC wished to demerge its defence business, Marconi Electronic Systems. This was against the background of a review into the company's future and consolidation of the American and European defence markets.

British Aerospace, until that point pursuing a merger with DASA, soon began merger talks with GEC. On January 19 1999 GEC and BAe announced that BAe was to acquire Marconi Electronic Systems for £7.7bn ($12.75bn). While the deal was yet to be completed GEC used proceeds of the MES sale (as well as heavy borrowing) to finance acquisitions during 1999. This was part of a major realignment of the firm to become a radio, telecommunications, and internet equipment manufacturing company. GEC purchased Reltec for £1.3bn in March and FORE Systems for £2.8bn in April.

British Aerospace completed its purchase of MES on November 30, 1999 to form BAE Systems. GEC announced that it was to be renamed Marconi plc.

Burst of the bubble

Marconi enjoyed early success, by September 2000 shares reached a high of £12.50. However this spending spree was to cause major problems for Marconi as the purchases were at a premium (approaching the height of the dot-com boom). During the 2000/2001 period the dot-com and telecoms industries suffered major downturns. Marconi's orderbook began to dry up as major clients such as the BT Group cut spending dramatically. On Wednesday July 4 2001 Marconi suspended trading of its shares, announced 4,000 job cuts and issued a profits warning. The following day the company's share price crashed 54%, in part due to the alarm caused by the suspension of trading.

In September 2001 Marconi issued a second profits warning. This forced the resignation of CEO George Simpson and Chairman Sir Roger Hurn. (Finance Director John Mayo was forced out earlier).

Reorganisation

New management started the task of reducing the company's debts and in November detailed the scale of the company's downturn, losses of over £5bn (against sales of £2.5bn) and a net value of £867m (£25bn in 2000).

On Monday March 19 2003 shares in the newly restructured Marconi Corporation started trading. In a debt for equity swap shareholders were given 0.5% of the new company, the rest of the shares were held by the company's creditors.

The crash in the company share price and subsequent debt for equity swap had significant implications for many of the company's current and former employees, many of whom had invested in the company through employee share buying schemes. This included many former GEC employees who had transferred to BAE Systems under the Marconi Electronic Systems demerger. There are reports of individual employees losing tens of thousands of pounds.

In September 2004 Marconi announced it had settled its remaining debts, at one stage over £4bn.

21CN failure

In April 2005 it was announced that Marconi had failed to win part of BT's £10 billion 21st Century Network transformation project. This will see the UK's present AXE/System X Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) changed to an Internet Protocol (IP) system. Marconi (as GEC) was instrumental in the development of System X. The prospect of being frozen out of the large scale BT project caused the share price to drop 40% in one day and led to the announcement of 800 job losses and the closure of their Liverpool factory.

The fact that Marconi Corporation plc received no major 21CN contract was a major surprise. An example of analysis before BT announced the winners of contracts is Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein's: [Marconi is] so advanced with its products and so entrenched with BT Group plc that its selection looks certain."

Ericsson deal

Shortly after the failure to secure part of 21CN, it became clear that Marconi was a likely takeover target. Huawei Technologies, a Chinese telecoms company, became the name commonly mentioned in the UK business press due to its existing partnerships with Marconi. [link] However by October 2005 Huawei was displaced by Ericsson and Alcatel as the likely victors. On October 25 Ericsson was announced as the winner with a bid of around £1.2bn ($2.1bn). The acquisition was completed on January 23, 2006 effective as per January 1, 2006. The Marconi name will still be used as brand within Ericsson.

Marconi's remaining UK operations were renamed telent plc.

Timeline

Notes

There are many companies that have Marconi in their name. This is mainly due to various diversification and consolidation over the history of the group. For example, several defense industry partnerships bearing the name "Marconi" are no longer associated with Marconi PLC following GEC's sale of its defense interests and merging of its communications groups to form Marconi Communications before the group's evolution to Marconi PLC.

See also

External links

 


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