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Microsoft buys Nokia smartphones, services in $7.6B deal

Microsoft is buying Nokia's lineup of smartphones and a portfolio of patents and services in an attempt to mount a more formidable challenge to Apple and Google, as more technological tasks get done on mobile devices instead of personal computers.

Canadian Stephen Elop could emerge as potential Ballmer successor

Microsoft buys Nokia smartphone operations

11 years ago
Duration 2:17
Nokia's chief executive moves to Microsoft Corp when deal is finished

Microsoft Corp. is buying Nokia Corp.'s lineup of smartphones and a portfolio of patents and services in an attempt to mount a more formidable challenge to Apple Inc. and Google Inc., as more technological tasks get done on mobile devices instead of personal computers.

The $7.6 billion Cdn deal is fuellingspeculation that Nokia's CEO, former Microsoft executive Stephen Elop, a Canadian, could emerge as a top candidate to succeed Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

Terms of the deal

  • About 32,000 Nokia employees will transfer to Microsoft, including 4,700 people in Finland and 18,300 people involved in production.
  • Microsoft acquires Nokias range of mobile phones and smart devices, including the Asha series of low- and mid-priced phones. The Lumia line of smartphones, which already runs the Windows Phone operating system, will also fall under Microsofts control.
  • Nokia will grant Microsoft a 10-year licence to its portfolio of patents. In return, Nokia will get to use Microsofts patents for its HERE services, the Finnish companys location and mapping tools.
  • Microsoft will now own Nokias licensing agreements, including a long-term patent licence agreement with Qualcomm, a U.S. firm that produces semiconductors.
  • A new data centre will be built in Finland, Nokias home base, to serve Microsoft customers in Europe.

The deal announced late Monday marks a major step in Microsoft's push to transform itself from a software maker focused on making operating systems and applications for desktop and laptop computers into a more versatile and nimble company that delivers services on any kind of internet-connected gadget.

Microsoft, which is based in Redmond, Wash., is being forced to evolve because people are increasingly pursuing their digital lives on smartphones and tablet computers, causing the demand for PCs to shrivel. The shift is weakening Microsoft, which has dominated the PC software market for the past 30 years, and empowering Apple, the maker of the trend-setting iPhone and iPad, and Google, which gives away the world's most popular mobile operating system, Android.

Nokia, based in Espoo, Finland, and Microsoft have been trying to make inroads in the smartphone market as part of a partnership forged in 2011. Under the alliance, Nokia's Lumia smartphones has run on Microsoft's Windows software, but those devices haven't emerged as a popular alternative to the iPhone or an array of Android-powered devices spearheaded by Samsung Electronics' smartphones and tablets.

Microsoft is betting it will have a better chance of narrowing the gap if it seizes complete control over how the mobile devices work with its Windows software.

"It's a bold step into the future a win-win for employees, shareholders and consumers of both companies," Ballmer said in a statement.

Microsoft investors were not convinced the deal would be a winner and sent the stock down $1.52 US or 4.5 per cent to $31.88.

Investors in Nokia welcomed the deal and its price, sending shares in the company over 38 per cent higher to4.10 in early trading Tuesday in Helsinki.

Canadian Elop could vie for top spot at Microsoft

The acquisition is being made at the same time that Microsoft is looking for a new leader. Just 10 days ago, Ballmer, 57, announced he will relinquish the CEO reins within the next year in a move that many analysts regarded as Microsoft's tacit admission that the company needed an infusion of fresh blood to revitalize itself.

Elop, a graduate of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont., will step aside as Nokia's president and CEO to become executive vice-president of Nokia devices and services in preparation for joining Microsoft once the acquisition closes. Chairman Risto Siilasmaa will stay in his current role and assume the duties of interim CEO.

Microsoft hopes to complete the deal early next year. If that timetable pans out, about 32,000 Nokia employees will transfer to Microsoft, which currently has about 99,000 workers.

The proposed price consists of $5.3 billion for the Nokia unit that makes mobile phones, including its line of Lumia smartphones that run Windows Phone software. Another $2.3 billion will be paid for a 10-year licence to use Nokia's patents, with the option to extend it indefinitely.

It will represent the second most expensive acquisition in Microsoft's 38-year history, ranking behind an $8.5 billion purchase of internet calling and video conferencing service Skype. Tony Bates, who ran Skype, is also regarded as a potential successor to Ballmer.

The money to buy Nokia's smartphones and patents will be drawn from the nearly $70 billion that Microsoft held in overseas accounts as of June 30.

Microsoft expansion into mobile devices hasn't fared well so far. Last year, the company began selling a line of tablets called Surface in hopes of undercutting Apple's iPad. The version of Surface running on a revamped version of Microsoft's Windows operating system fared so poorly that the company absorbed a $900 million charge in its last quarter to account for the flop.

Nokia plans to hold a news conference in Finland on Tuesday morning to discuss the deal. Microsoft executives will elaborate on their rationale for the deal shortly after Nokia wraps up its presentation.

With files from The Canadian Press