Nortel
Company type | Public |
---|---|
formerly TSX: NT.TO | |
Industry | |
Founded | December 7, 1895 Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Defunct | February 2, 2013 |
Fate | Bankruptcy |
Headquarters | , Canada |
Number of employees |
|
Parent | AT&T / Bell Canada (1895–1956) Bell Canada (1956–1983)[2] BCE Inc. (1983–2000) |
Website | www |
Nortel Networks Corporation (Nortel), formerly Northern Telecom Limited, was a Canadian multinational telecommunications and data networking equipment manufacturer headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in Montreal, Quebec in 1895 as the Northern Electric and Manufacturing Company. Until an antitrust settlement in 1949, Northern Electric was owned principally by Bell Canada and the Western Electric Company of the Bell System, producing large volumes of telecommunications equipment based on licensed Western Electric designs.[3]
At its height, Nortel accounted for more than a third of the total valuation of all companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), employing 94,500 people worldwide.[4] In 2009, Nortel filed for bankruptcy protection in Canada and the United States, triggering a 79% decline in its corporate stock price. The bankruptcy case was the largest in Canadian history and left pensioners, shareholders, and former employees with enormous losses. By 2016, Nortel had sold billions of dollars in assets.[5] Courts in the U.S. and Canada approved a negotiated settlement of bankruptcy proceedings in 2017.[6][7]
History
Origins
Alexander Graham Bell conceived the technical aspects of the telephone and invented it in July 1874, while residing with his parents at their farm in Tutela Heights, on the outskirts of Brantford, Ontario.[8][9] He later refined its design at Brantford after producing his first working prototype in Boston.[10] Canada's first telephone factory, created by James Cowherd of Brantford, was a three-story brick building that soon started manufacturing telephones for the Bell System, leading to the city's style as The Telephone City.[11][note 1]
After Cowherd's death in 1881 which resulted in the closure of his Brantford factory, a mechanical production department was created within the Bell Telephone Company of Canada and production of Canadian telephone equipment was transferred to Montreal in 1882 to compensate the restrictions on importing telephone equipment from the United States.[14] [16] In addition to telephones, four years later, the department started manufacturing switchboards, at first the 50-line Standard Magneto Switchboard.[14][17] The small manufacturing department expanded yearly with the growth and popularity of the telephone to 50 employees in 1888.[18] By 1890 it had been transformed into its own branch of operations with 200 employees, and a new factory was under construction.[14]
As the manufacturing branch expanded, its production ability increased beyond the demand for telephones, and it faced closure for several months a year without manufacturing other products.[19] The Bell Telephone Company of Canada's (later renamed to Bell Canada) charter prohibited the company to build other products. In 1895, the Bell Telephone of Canada spun off its manufacturing arm to build telephones for sale to other companies, as well as other products, such as fire alarm boxes, police street call boxes, and fire department call equipment. This company was incorporated as the Northern Electric and Manufacturing Company Limited.[14]
Northern Electric and Manufacturing Company
Northern Electric and Manufacturing Company Limited were incorporated on December 7, 1895. The initial stock capital was $50,000 at $100 per share, with 93% held by the Bell Telephone Company of Canada and the remainder held by seven corporate directors.[20] The first general stockholders meeting was held on March 24, 1896.
In December 1899, The Bell Telephone Company of Canada bought a cabling company for $500,000; a Canadian charter named it The Wire and Cable Company.[21] Northern Electric and Manufacturing further expanded its product line in 1900, manufacturing the first Canadian wind-up gramophones that played flat discs.[22] In 1911 the Wire and Cable Company changed its name to the Imperial Wire and Cable Company.[23]
Northern Electric Company
The construction of a new manufacturing plant started in 1913 at Shearer Street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, as preparations began for the two manufacturing companies' integration. Then, in January 1914, the Northern Electric and Manufacturing Company and the Imperial Wire and Cable Company merged into the Northern Electric Company, commonly known simply as Northern Electric. The new company opened the doors on a new manufacturing plant in January 1915. This facility, located on Shearer Street, was the primary manufacturing centre until the mid-1950s.[22] Edward Fleetford Sise was the president and his brother Paul Fleetford Sise was the vice-president and general manager.[24]
During the First World War Northern Electric manufactured the Portable Commutator, a one-wire telegraphic switchboard for military operations in the field.[25][26] In 1922, Northern started to produce, for $5, the "Peanut" vacuum tube, which required only a single dry-cell battery. The use of alternating current was still under development during this time. The "Northern Electric Peanut tube was the smallest tube made, and drew only one-tenth of an ampere and was the most remarkable radio frequency amplifier ever made."[27] During the 1920s Northern Electric made kettles, toasters, cigar lighters, electric stoves, and washing machines.[28] In January 1923, Northern Electric started to operate an AM radio station with call letters CHYC, in the Shearer Street plant, and much of the programming was religious services for the Northern Electric employees and families in the community. In July 1923, CHYC-AM was the first radio station to provide entertainment to the riders of the transcontinental train, in a parlor car fitted with a radio set to receive the broadcast as it left Montreal and traveled west.[29] Later in the 1920s, Northern created the first talking movie sound system in the British Empire for a theater in Montreal.[28]
During the Great Depression in the 1930s, Northern Electric was affected, like most other companies. From the beginning of 1930 through the end of 1933, sales dropped from $34 million to $8.2 million, with employees dropping from 6,100 to 2,400.[30]
Independence from Western Electric
In 1949, an antitrust suit in the U.S. forced AT&T/Western Electric to sell its stake in Northern Electric to Bell Canada. AT&T spun off Northern Electric in 1956. Deprived of its Western Electric tie, Northern began developing its own products. In 1953, Northern Electric produced its first television sets using tubes made by RCA.[31] Bell Canada acquired 100 percent of Northern Electric in 1964; through public stock offerings starting in 1973, Bell's ownership of Northern Electric and its successors would be reduced, though it continued to have majority control.[32]
In 1966, the Northern Electric research lab, Northern Electric Laboratories (the predecessor to Bell-Northern Research), started looking into the possibilities of fiber optic cable, and in 1969, began work on digitizing telephone communications. Also in 1969, Northern began making inroads into the U.S. market with its switching systems. In 1972, it opened its first factory in the U.S. in Michigan. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Northern began shipping its first digital switching systems, one of the earliest such systems to be sold.[33]
Northern Telecom was, with Bell-Northern Research, in the early 1970s a part owner of MicroSystems International, a semiconductor manufacturer based in Nepean, outside Ottawa.[34][35]
Northern Telecom and "Digital World"
This section contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. (May 2012) |
In March 1976, the company name was changed to Northern Telecom Limited, and management announced its intention to concentrate the company's efforts on digital technology.[36] Northern Telecom was the first company in its industry to announce and to deliver a complete line of fully digital telecommunications products. The product line was branded "Digital World" and included the well known DMS-100, a fully digital central office switch serving as many as 100,000 lines, which was a key contributor to the company's revenue for close to 15 years.[citation needed]
Starting in 1977, Nortel grew rapidly after the introduction of its DMS line of digital central office telephone switches, especially after the AT&T breakup in 1984. Northern Telecom became a significant supplier in Europe and China[37] [citation needed] and was the first non-Japanese supplier to Nippon Telegraph and Telephone.
Deregulation
In 1983, due to deregulation, Bell Canada Enterprises (later shortened to BCE) was formed as the parent company to Bell Canada and Northern Telecom. Bell-Northern Research was jointly owned 50–50 by Bell Canada and Northern Telecom. The combined three companies were referred to as the tricorporate.[38][39][40]
As Nortel, the streamlined identity it adopted for its 100th anniversary in 1995, the company set out to dominate the burgeoning global market for public and private networks.[citation needed]
Optical boom and bust
In 1998, with the acquisition of Bay Networks, the company's name was changed to Nortel Networks to emphasize its ability to provide complete solutions for multiprotocol, multiservice, global networking over the Internet and other communications networks. As a consequence of the stock transaction used to purchase Bay Networks, BCE ceased to be the majority shareholder of Nortel.[citation needed]
In 1999, Nortel outsourced several of its manufacturing operations to North American contractors.[41]
In 2000, BCE spun out Nortel, distributing its holdings of Nortel to its shareholders. Bell-Northern Research was gradually absorbed into Nortel, as it first acquired a majority share in BNR, and eventually acquired the entire company.[citation needed]
In the late 1990s, stock market speculators, hoping that Nortel would reap increasingly lucrative profits from the sale of fibre optic network gear, began pushing up the company's share price to unheard-of levels despite the company's repeated failure to turn a profit.[42] Under the leadership of chief executive officer (CEO) John Roth, sales of optical equipment had been robust in the late 1990s, but the market was soon saturated. When the speculative telecom bubble of the late 1990s reached its pinnacle late in the year 2000, Nortel was to become one of the most spectacular casualties.[citation needed] Nortel's revenues would be dented by a saturated market and the failure of WorldCom, which was a major customer.[43][44][45]
At its height, Nortel accounted for more than a third of the total valuation of all the companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), employing 94,500 worldwide, with 25,900 in Canada alone.[4][46] Nortel's market capitalization fell from C$398 billion in September 2000 to less than C$5 billion in August 2002, as Nortel's stock price plunged from C$124 to C$0.47. When Nortel's stock crashed, it took with it a wide swath of Canadian investors and pension funds and left 60,000 Nortel employees unemployed. Roth was criticized after it was revealed that he cashed in his own stock options for a personal gain of C$135 million in 2000 alone.[47]
CEO John Roth retired in 2001. His planned successor and chief operating officer (COO), Clarence Chandran, already on sick leave due to complications following his 1997 stabbing in Singapore,[48] decided to quit, however.[49] Chief financial officer (CFO) Frank Dunn was eventually chosen as Roth's permanent replacement.
After the Internet bubble
Accounting restatements
Frank Dunn presided over a dramatic restructuring of Nortel, which included laying off two-thirds of its workforce (60,000 staff) and writedowns of nearly US$16 billion in 2001 alone. This had some initial perceived success in turning the company around, with an unexpected return to profitability reported in the first quarter of 2003. The black ink triggered a total of $70 million in bonuses to the top 43 managers,[50] with $7.8 million going to Dunn alone,[51] $3 million to chief financial officer Douglas Beatty, and $2 million to controller Michael Gollogly.[52] Independent auditor Deloitte & Touche advised audit committee chairman John Cleghorn and board chairman "Red" Wilson to look into the suspicious results, who promptly hired the law firm WilmerHale to vet the financial statements.[53] In late October 2003, Nortel announced that it intended to restate approximately $900 million of liabilities carried on its previously reported balance sheet as of June 30, 2003, following a comprehensive internal review of these liabilities. The company stated that the restatement's principal effects would be a reduction in previously reported net losses for 2000, 2001, and 2002 and an increase in shareholders' equity and net assets previously reported on its balance sheet. A dozen of the company's most senior executives returned $8.6 million of bonuses they were paid based on the erroneous accounting. Investigators ultimately found about $3 billion in revenue had been booked improperly in 1998, 1999, and 2000. More than $2 billion was moved into later years, about $750 million was pushed forward beyond 2003 and about $250 million was wiped away completely. The accounting scandal hurt both Nortel's reputation and finances, as Nortel spent an estimated US$400 million on outside auditors and management consultants to retrain staff.[53]
To improve its liquidity, in 2003 Nortel arranged a US$750 million credit support facility with Export Development Canada.[54] Walter Robinson of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation denounced the line of credit, calling it "corporate welfare at its worst."[55]
On April 28, 2004 amidst the accounting scandal, three of Nortel's top lieutenants—Douglas Beatty, CEO Frank Dunn and Michael Gollogly—were fired for financial mismanagement.[56] They were later charged with fraud by the RCMP.[57][58] The trial began on January 16, 2012,[59] ending with acquittals for all three.[56][60][61]
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also filed charges against them and four vice-presidents for civil fraud.[58] On December 19, 2014, remaining civil charges from the Ontario Securities Commission and SEC were simultaneously dropped.[62]
Owens and Zafirovski
After Dunn's firing, retired United States Admiral Bill Owens – at the time a member of the board of directors – was appointed interim CEO. Nortel Networks subsequently returned to using the Nortel name for branding purposes only (the official company name was not changed). Nortel acquired PEC Solutions, a provider of information technology and telecommunications services to various government agencies and departments, in June 2005 and renamed it Nortel Government Solutions Incorporated (NGS).[63][64] LG Electronics and Nortel formed a joint venture in August, with Nortel owning 50% plus one share, to offer telecom and networking solutions in the wireline, optical, wireless and enterprise areas for South Korean and global customers.
Peter W. Currie, previously the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of the Royal Bank of Canada, was named CFO of Nortel in 2005, having previously served as Northern Telecom's CFO in the 1990s. Gary Daichendt, the former Chief Operating Officer of Cisco Systems, was hired as president and COO, and was expected to succeed Owens as CEO. Shortly afterward, Daichendt appointed ex-Cisco Chief Science Officer Gary Kunis as Chief Technology Officer (CTO). Both Garys were concerned about the overall direction of Nortel, especially when compared to Cisco, their previous employer. Just three months later, Daichendt resigned after both his restructuring plan and his suggestion that Owens and Currie leave the company immediately were rejected by the board of directors. Kunis quit shortly thereafter.[65] At the year's end, directors Lynton "Red" Wilson and John Cleghorn retired from the board.
Brian Sheilds, an employee at Nortel, claimed the company was hacked in 2004, by sources believed to be in China. Sheilds speculated that the hackers had free rein within the Nortel network for more than a decade before their collapse. Nortel management did not take Sheilds claims seriously, with former CEO Zafirovski telling the Wall Sreet Journal in 2012 that Shields had a reputation to "cry wolf".[66][67]
Mike S. Zafirovski, who had served as president and CEO of GE Lighting and then as Motorola President and COO, succeeded Owens as president and CEO on November 15, 2005.[68] Motorola filed a suit against Zafirovski's hiring, alleging that his new position would break the terms of the non-disclosure agreement he had signed. Nortel agreed to pay $11.5 million on his behalf to settle the lawsuit.[69] Nortel also paid out US$575 million and 629 million common shares in 2006 to settle a class-action lawsuit that accused the company of misleading investors about the company's health.
Currie stepped down as Executive Vice President and CFO in early 2007. In February 2007, Nortel announced its plans to reduce its workforce by 2,000 employees, and to transfer an additional 1,000 jobs to lower-cost job sites. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil fraud charges against Nortel for accounting fraud from 2000 to 2003; the fraud was allegedly to close gaps between its true performance, its internal targets and Wall Street expectations. Nortel settled the case, paying $35 million, which the Commission distributed to affected shareholders, and reported periodically to the commission on remedial measures to improve its financial accounting.
Nortel announced plans in February 2008 to eliminate 2,100 jobs, and to transfer another 1,000 jobs to lower-cost centres.[70] As part of the reductions, Nortel shut down its Calgary campus in 2009.[71]
During its reporting of third quarter 2008 results, Nortel announced it would restructure into three vertically-integrated business units: Enterprise, Carrier Networks, and Metro Ethernet Networks. As part of the decentralization of its organization, four executive positions were eliminated, effective January 1, 2009: Chief Marketing Officer - Lauren Flaherty; Chief Technology Officer - John Roese; Global Services President - Dietmar Wendt; and Executive Vice President Global Sales - Bill Nelson. A net reduction of 1,300 jobs was also announced.[72] As its stock price dropped below $1, the New York Stock Exchange notified Nortel that it would be delisted if its common shares failed to rise above $1 per share within 6 months.[73] Rumours continued to persist of Nortel's poor financial health, amid the late 2000s recession, and its bids for government funds were turned down.[74]
Liquidation
Protection from creditors
On January 14, 2009, Nortel filed for protection from creditors, in the United States under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, in Canada under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, and in the United Kingdom under the Insolvency Act 1986.[6][75][76] Nortel was the first major technology company to seek bankruptcy protection in this global downturn.[77] Nortel had an interest payment of $107 million due the next day, approximately 4.6% of its cash reserves of approximately $2.3 billion.[78] After the announcement, the share price fell more than 79% on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Export Development Canada agreed to provide up to C$30 million in short-term financing through its existing credit support facility with Nortel. The Canadian government resisted characterizing its position on Nortel as a bailout.[79]
Nortel initially hoped to re-emerge from bankruptcy, implementing a retention bonus plan in an effort to retain its top executives during the restructuring period. These bonuses, totaling US$45 million, were targeted at 1,000 executive positions.[80] At the end of January 2009, Nortel announced that it would be discontinuing its WiMAX business and its agreement with Alvarion.[81][82] Nortel subsequently sold its Layer 4–7 application delivery business to Israeli technology firm Radware for $18 million, after Radware had initially placed a stalking horse bid.[83][84] Nortel had acquired the application switch product line in October 2000 when it purchased Alteon WebSystems.[85]
Wind-up
With the worsening recession and stock market decline deterring potential companies from bidding for Nortel's assets, and many of Nortel's major customers reconsidering their relationships with the restructuring company,[86] in June Nortel announced that it no longer planned to emerge from bankruptcy protection, and would seek buyers for all of its business units.[87] After announcing it planned to sell off all of its assets, Nortel shares were delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange on June 26, 2009 at a price of $0.185 per share, down from its high in 2000 when it comprised a third of the S&P/TSX composite index.[87][88][89] Mike Zafirovski subsequently resigned in August, and Nortel's board of directors was reorganized with three members instead of nine.[90] Nortel handed out $14.2 million in cash compensation to seven executives in 2009. Nortel also paid out $1.4 million to 10 former and current directors, and paid $140 million to lawyers, pension, human resources and financial experts helping to oversee the company's bankruptcy proceedings.[91]
Nokia Siemens Networks made a stalking horse bid to purchase Nortel's CDMA and LTE assets for $650 million.[87] By the July 21 deadline for additional bids, MatlinPatterson and Ericsson had made offers,[92] and Ericsson emerged as the victor in the following auction, with a purchase price of $1.13 billion.[93][94] Avaya won an auction for Nortel's Enterprise Solutions business, including Nortel's stake in Nortel Government Solutions and DiamondWare, for $900 million,[95] after having placed a stalking horse bid of $475 million.[96] In November, Nortel sold its MEN (Metro Ethernet Networks) unit to Ciena Corporation for US$530 million in cash and US$239 million in convertible notes,[97][98] and its GSM business at auction to Ericsson and Kapsch for US$103 million.[99][100][101][102] Hitachi purchased the Next Generation Packet Core assets.[103] As insurance against judgments in class action lawsuits filed by former employees, John Roth filed in December 2009 for a US$1 billion indemnification from Nortel, joining the list of U.S. creditors.[104]
In February 2010, Ernst & Young, the court-appointed monitor of Nortel's Canadian bankruptcy proceedings, reported that the assets of Nortel's Health and Welfare Trust had a shortfall of $37 million in its net assets as of December 31, 2008. The trust supports pensioners' medical, dental and life insurance benefits, as well as income support for some groups such as long-term disability recipients.[105] Also in February, Nortel negotiated a $57 million deal to wind up the health care and other benefits provided to former Canadian employees. Shortly afterwards, Nortel proposed spending $92.3M on retention bonuses for 1,475 employees in its Nortel Business Services and Corporate groups, with $2.5 million in incentives going to Christopher Ricaute, president of Nortel Business Services; $27 million allocated for Canadian employees; and $55 million allocated for U.S. employees.[106] The proposed plan was later extended by an additional $27 million.[107] Claiming that the retention bonuses proposal was extraordinary, acting US trustee Roberta DeAngelis objected to the payment of $55.6 million to 866 employees.[108] However, court-appointed representatives for Nortel's former employees, who are creditors in the Ontario bankruptcy court, have signed an agreement to not oppose any employee incentive program.
GENBAND purchased the Carrier VoIP and Application Solutions (CVAS) unit in May 2010, as Nortel accepted its stalking horse bid of $282 million, with adjustments that decreased the net sale price to about $100 million, without a formal bidding process.[109][110][111] Ericsson purchased Nortel's share in its joint venture with LG Electronics for US$242 million, forming LG-Ericsson, in June 2010.[112][113] Ericsson also purchased Nortel's final operating unit, the Multi-Service Switch division, in September 2010 for US$65 million.[114][115][116] Nortel's Ottawa campus on Carling Avenue was purchased by Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) in October 2010 for a cash purchase price of CDN$208 million,[117] to serve as the new home of Canada's National Defence Headquarters.[118]
Nortel's 53.13% stake in Turkish company Nortel Netaş was acquired by One Equity Partners (OEP) and Rhea Investments for $68 million in December 2010.[119][120]
The last major asset of Nortel, approximately 6,000 patents and patent applications encompassing technologies such as wireless, wireless 4G, data networking, optical, voice, Internet, and semiconductors, was sold for $4.5 billion to a consortium including Apple, EMC, Ericsson, Microsoft, BlackBerry Limited, and Sony, pending American and Canadian court approval.[121][122] (Google had placed the initial stalking horse bid of $900 million[123] and later upped the bid to $1,902,160,540, then $2,614,972,128, and eventually $3.14159 billion, which are references to Brun's constant, Meissel–Mertens constant, and pi.)[124] Bankruptcy filings state that Nortel owed former Canadian engineers $285,000 for patent awards that were not paid.[125][citation needed]
In October 2011, the administrators of Nortel's British subsidiary lost their appeal to overturn a court order requiring them to pay £2.1 billion into Nortel's underfunded pension plan.[126][citation needed] Nortel's U.S. retirement income plan is now managed by PBGC Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.[127]
In January 2014, a pact between the U.S. and European divisions of Nortel was approved by a U.S. court.[128] However, litigation continued. In April 2016, Nortel went back to court for a fresh round of legal arguments in a seven-year-old bankruptcy which cost creditors about $2 billion including attorney fees.[129] Courts in the U.S. and Canada approved a negotiated settlement among competing creditors in January 2017.[130]
Products
Nortel made telecommunications, computer network equipment and software. It served both general businesses and communications carriers (landline telephone, mobile phone, and cable TV carriers). Technologies included telephonic (voice) equipment, fiber optics, local wireless, and multimedia.
Past products included:
Telephone Systems | Telephone sets and terminals | LAN and MAN equipment |
---|---|---|
Application Server 5200 and Application Server 5300 (AS5300) | Nortel business phones, digital sets for Meridian and Norstar | Baystack and ERS (Ethernet Routing Switch), managed network switches for Ethernet; ERS-8600, ERS-8300, ERS-5600, ERS-5500, ERS-4500, ERS-2500 |
Digital Multiplex System (DMS and SL-100 families) large-scale digital carrier phone switch | Northern Electric home phones | Multiservice Switch (MSS) (formerly Passport); MSS20000, MSS15000, MSS7400, MSS6400 |
Meridian 1 (SL-1) medium-to-large-scale PBX | Northern Telecom home phones | Metro Ethernet Routing Switch 8600 |
Meridian Norstar small-to-medium-scale digital key telephone system | Nortel payphones | Nortel Secure Network Access (switch and software) |
Nortel Communication Servers, medium-to-large-scale VoIP PBX Systems; CS2100, CS2000, CS1500, CS1000 | Nortel IP Phone 1120E | |
Meridian Data Networking System (DV-1) | Meridian M4020 | |
SG-1 analog wired logic control PBX | ||
SP-1 analog stored program control carrier switch | ||
Routers | Software | Other WAN equipment |
Secure Router 1000 Systems; SR1004, SR1002, SR1001S, SR1001 | Visualization Performance & Fault Manager (VPFM) | 1 Mbit/s modem |
Secure Router 3120 | Nortel Enterprise Switch Manager | S/DMS SONET |
Secure Router 4134 | Nortel File and Inventory Manager | OPTera Long Haul |
Secure Router 8000 Systems; SR8002, SR8004, SR8008, SR8012 | Nortel Multi-link Trunking Manager | |
VPN Routers; 1750, 2700, 2750, 5000 | Nortel Multicast Manager | |
Nortel Speech Server | ||
Passport Carrier Release | ||
Nortel Routing Manager | ||
Nortel Security Manager | ||
Nortel VLAN manager | ||
DiamondWare 3D Voice Platform | ||
Unified Communications Management | ||
Agile Communication Environment |
Criticism and controversy
Payments to lawyers and accountants
In 2016, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that lawyers and accountants received CA$2.5 billion from Nortel's estate.[131]
Environmental damage
After bankruptcy, Nortel's estate faced CA$300 million in claims to pay for environmental damage at various sites, including Belleville, Brockville, Kingston and London.[132]
Espionage and hacks
In September 1991, Julian Assange was discovered in the act of hacking into the Melbourne master terminal of Nortel.[133]
In 2012, The Wall Street Journal reported that in 2004, Nortel discovered that crackers gained almost-complete access to Nortel's systems. Beginning in at least 2000 they accessed documents including emails, technical papers, research, development reports, and business plans. The breach was not properly addressed by the time the company filed for bankruptcy in 2009. Hackers working from Chinese IP addresses had allegedly used seven passwords of Nortel executives, including a former CEO, to penetrate networks owned by the company.[134]
Brian Shields, a former senior systems security advisor for Nortel, led an internal investigation into the breach and exposed rootkit software on at least two machines in 2009 that allowed hackers to control them remotely and monitor email. Despite the original discovery in 2004 and the subsequent investigation that led to the rootkit detection in 2009, Nortel allegedly ignored the problem and failed to disclose it to potential buyers of its business. Avaya and Genband both acquired parts of Nortel, and some employees used old Nortel machines connected to the new companies' networks. Although Avaya says it has dealt with the issue, Shields says "it's despicable that Nortel didn't say anything", leaving it up to him to inform the new company of his investigation. Nortel refused to comment on The Wall Street Journal report, but former CEO Mike Zafirovski, in charge between 2005 and 2009, claimed the company "did not believe it was a real issue".[134][135][136] [137][138]
Shields alleged that the hacking may have benefited Chinese competitors such as Huawei and ZTE. While unable to offer conclusive proof Shields stated that "When 2000 came along, then it was a downward slide. And that coincidentally is the year when Huawei started selling on the international market. How coincidental."[139][140]
Government bailouts
2003
On February 16, 2003, the Winnipeg Sun published an article criticising the Canadian Federal government for propping up "mega-loser Nortel" through Export Development Canada (EDC). The article interviewed Walter Robinson of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation who termed this EDC support as "corporate welfare at its worst". Mr Robinson was appalled that Canadians who already lost billions on Nortel on the stock market would be asked for even more money through their taxes to support Nortel.[55]
2009
The EDC had agreed to provide up to CA$30 million in short-term financing through an existing bonding facility. This money was previously available to Nortel, and no special funding was made available. The Canadian government resisted characterizing its position on Nortel as a bailout.[141]
Illegal breach of trust in Nortel's Health and Welfare Trust
There have been reports of financial irregularities at Nortel's Health and Welfare Trust. Diane Urquhart, a financial analyst, testified before a parliamentary committee that $100 million is missing from the HWT and that a $37 million loan to the corporation has not been paid back.[142] The HWT was an unregistered trust maintained by Nortel to provide medical, dental, life insurance, long-term disability and survivor income and pension transition benefits.[143][144] Until 2005 Nortel fully funded the disability insurance in its HWT. However, it is alleged that since then, the HWT Governance Committees and third party trustee, Northern Trust, breached their fiduciary duties to protect Nortel's disabled employees and survivors of deceased employees by allowing Nortel to misdirect over CA$100 million from the HWT for purposes inconsistent with the terms of the HWT.[145] As of March 1, 2012, Northern Trust continues to act as the paying agent for Canadian Nortel pensioners.[146]
Bookkeeping irregularities
In 2007, both the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Ontario Securities Commission laid charges against former senior financial officials from Nortel including Frank Dunn who was fired from Nortel in 2004. Frank Dunn was promoted from chief financial officer to replace John A. Roth as CEO in November 2001. According to the SEC, Dunn and three other financial officers began to fudge revenue by misusing "bill and hold" transactions starting "no later than September, 2000". The SEC said that at least a year's worth of the alleged book-keeping took place while John Roth was still CEO of Nortel, even though no charges were laid against him.[147][148]
Treatment of Nortel pensioners
On June 23, 2010, the News and Observer published a story criticizing treatment pensioners have been receiving from their former employer, Nortel. According to the article, Nortel has asked a federal court to terminate medical coverage, prescription drug coverage, long-term disability, and life insurance of 4,000 retirees and dependents, claiming the benefits are costing the company $2 million per month. Nortel blamed the company's creditors for this decision.[149]
Ex-CEO as creditor
In the middle of the decade several class-action lawsuits were filed against John Roth and others, by former employees who felt that their 401K company plans were depleted due to misrepresentation by the defendants. They claimed they were duped into investing in Nortel stock, when those who encouraged them to do so allegedly knew that the company was ailing. John Roth left Nortel in 2001 with more than CA$130 million.
In 2009, Roth filed a claim for CA$1 billion, aiming to become a creditor to the assets of Nortel along with all other Nortel employees, in case the class action lawsuits against him succeeded.[150][151]
Conflicts of interest
During Nortel's 2002 annual shareholders' meeting held in Halifax, Nova Scotia, several shareholders (including Robert Verdun) complained about non-arms-length relationships with service providers such as director Yves Fortier, who provided legal services to Nortel while sitting on its board, and Nortel's auditors, Deloitte & Touche LLP, who were paid $15 million for non-auditing services.[152]
Headquarters bugging
In 2013 workers preparing the former Nortel headquarters for the Department of National Defence discovered electronic eavesdropping devices.[153] The bugs found were older and non-operational leading Canadian intelligence to draw the conclusion that the former tenant Nortel and not the future tenant MND was the target.[154]
IP theft and knockoffs
In 2001 Nortel identified knockoff products circulating in the Chinese market, in which they did not compete.[155] Nortel management chose not to press the issue.[156]
Corporate information
Headquarters
During Nortel's dissolution the headquarters was relocated to 5945 Airport Road in Mississauga, Ontario.[157] Previous locations of its head offices included 60 Moodie Drive in Ottawa (now headquarters of Department of National Defence), 8200 Dixie Road[158] in Brampton, Ontario (sold to Rogers Communications in 2006 and now known as Rogers Park, Brampton) and 195 The West Mall in Toronto (now used by SNC-Lavalin).[159]
Global worksites, partners, and customers
Nortel expanded into the U.S. in 1971. The company eventually had employees in over 100 locations in the U.S. with R&D, software engineering, and sales centres in many states including California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Texas, and Virginia. Nortel's full-service R&D centres were located in Ottawa (its R&D headquarters), Beijing, and Guangzhou.[160] In Canada, Nortel also had R&D sites in Montreal, Belleville, and Calgary. In the United States, Nortel's major R&D sites were in Research Triangle Park (North Carolina), Richardson (Texas), Billerica (Massachusetts), and Santa Clara.
Nortel had a significant presence in Europe, Middle East, Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America. Nortel delivered network infrastructure and communication services to customers across Asia in (mainland) China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, India, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, and Turkey (Nortel owned 53.17% of Nortel Netaş, originally established as a joint venture with Turkish PTT in 1967).[161] In addition, the company had three joint ventures in the People's Republic of China, including Guangdong Nortel Telecommunications Equipment (GDNT), which operated Nortel's full service R&D centres in China.
Business structure
At the start of 2010, based on membership in Nortel's benefit plan, there were 1,637 employees working for Nortel Networks and 982 working for Nortel Technology in Canada.[162] In February 2008, Nortel employed approximately 32,550 people worldwide, including 6,800 employees in Canada and 11,900 in the United States.[70] Nortel operations were divided into the following segments:[163][164]
- Carrier Networks (CN): Mobility networking solutions, including CDMA, GSM, and UMTS, and carrier networking solutions, both circuit and packet based.
- Enterprise Solutions (ES): Enterprise networking solutions, including circuit and packet based voice, data, security, multimedia messaging and conferencing, and call centres.
- Metro Ethernet Networks (MEN): Optical and metropolitan area networking solutions, for carrier and enterprise customers.
- Global Services (GS): Services in four areas: network implementation, network support, network management, and network applications (including web services).
Corporate governance
Nortel's board of directors resigned and the board disbanded effective October 3, 2012. All remaining executive officers also resigned effective this date. As part of the wind-down process, a court order was issued providing Ernst & Young Inc., the court-appointed monitor in Nortel's creditor protection proceedings, the ability to exercise any powers which may be properly exercised by a board of directors of Nortel.[165]
Former members of the board of directors
|
|
Past leadership
- Edward Fleetford Sise, President of the Northern Electric Company (1914–1919)
- Paul Fleetford Sise, President of the Northern Electric Company (1919–1948)
- Ralph Holley Keefler, President of the Northern Electric Company (1948 –1964)
- Vernon Oswald Marquez, President of the Northern Electric Company (1967-1971)
- John C. Lobb, President (1971-1974)
- David G. Vice, President and COO
- Walter Frederick Light, President of Northern Telecom (1974-1982)
- Edmund B. Fitzgerald, President (1982-1989)
- Paul G. Stern, CEO (1989-1992)
- Jean Monty, President[169]
- Roy Merrills, President
- John Roth, President, CEO and chairman of the Board of Nortel Networks (1997-2001)
- Frank Dunn, President and CEO of Nortel Networks (2001-2004)
- Bill Owens, President and CEO of Nortel Networks (2004-2005)
- Mike Zafirovski, President and CEO of Nortel Networks (2005-2009)
See also
- Accounting scandals
- 1-Meg Modem
- Bell Telephone Memorial
- Bell-Northern Research
- Busy override
- Canadian Industrial Research and Development Organizations
- Data 100
- Multiservice Switch
- Nortel Government Solutions
- Passport Carrier Release
- Nortel Retirees and former employees Protection Canada (NRPC)
- List of Nortel protocols
Notes
- ^ Alexander Graham Bell had originally asked Boston manufacturer Charles Williams to provide an initial order of 1,000 telephones for use in Canada, but Williams' small shop was only able to produce a fraction of that number. Bell then spoke with a Brantford friend, James Cowherd (1849? – Feb. 1881), who set up Canada's first telephone factory which produced 2,398 telephones to Bell's specifications by 1881. Bell sent Cowherd to Boston in 1878 to study Williams manufacturing processes for a number of months; Cowherd then returned to Brantford to produce Bell's production telephones, and help develop newer models. Among Cowherd's designs was a transmitter fitted with a triple mouthpiece allowing three people to talk, and sing, simultaneously. Cowherd's untimely early death from tuberculosis was noted in major technical journals and led to the closure of the Bell Systems' manufacturing supplier plant in Brantford. Telephone production later resumed in Montreal, eventually leading to the creation of Northern Electric, later renamed Northern Telecom and then Nortel.[12][13][14] A Brantford Expositor article later noted of the historic factory building's demise: "[Brantford] City officials and heritage committee members hung their heads in shame in 1992 when it was learned that a building that once housed the first telephone factory in the world had been approved for demolition. The embarrassing oversight came to light too late to stop wrecking crews, who were already tearing down the aged building at 32 Wharfe St... The building, where equipment for Alexander Graham Bell's first telephone was made, had even been pictured and written about in a city-printed brochure about the great inventor. A plaque erected by [the] Telephone Pioneers of America heralding the building's significance had been stripped from the structure in the mid-1980s and given to the Brant County Museum".[15]
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- ^ "Senate kills bill that would help disabled Nortel workers". CTV News. December 9, 2010. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Systemic Failure of Employer Sponsored Disability Insurance" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
- ^ Minsky LLP, Koskie. "Nortel Networks Corporation – Developments". Kmlaw.ca. Archived from the original on December 5, 2011. Retrieved May 26, 2012.
- ^ Erman, Boyd (March 13, 2007). "Ex-Nortel CEO John Roth says he's cleared – The Globe and Mail". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Archived from the original on August 28, 2016. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
- ^ "Unknown". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. March 12, 2007. Retrieved March 12, 2011. [dead link ](subscription required)
- ^ "Nortel wants to dump retirees". News and Observer. June 23, 2010. Archived from the original on June 26, 2010.
- ^ "Former Nortel exec seeks $1B protection from lawsuits". CBC News Ottawa. December 17, 2009. Archived from the original on March 17, 2010.
- ^ Evans, Mark (December 18, 2009). "John Roth Wants Nortel's Help!". Archived from the original on July 7, 2011. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
- ^ "Shareholders Blast Nortel – Telecom News Analysis". Light Reading. Archived from the original on June 19, 2012. Retrieved May 26, 2012.
- ^ "Was Nortel's Ottawa Campus bugged?". infosecurity-magazine.com. Infosecurity Magazine. October 3, 2013. Archived from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
- ^ Pugliese, David (October 18, 2016). "ottawacitizen.com". ottawacitizen.com. Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
- ^ Obiko Pearson, Natalie (July 1, 2020). "Did a Chinese Hack Kill Canada's Greatest Tech Company? Nortel was once a world leader in wireless technology. Then came a hack and the rise of Huawei". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on July 1, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
- ^ V. Hulme, George (August 25, 2014). "Why our lack of understanding on China may be the biggest risk". csoonline.com. IOG Communications inc. Archived from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
- ^ Nortel Networks Corporation (2009). "Nortel in Canada – Local Offices". Nortel Networks Corporation. Archived from the original on July 3, 2002. Retrieved December 10, 2009.
- ^ "Nortel Brampton Headquarters". Gettyimages.ca. Gettyimages. January 1, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
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- ^ Nortel Networks (2008). "Nortel's Major Research & Development Locations". Archived from the original on May 5, 2007. Retrieved September 4, 2008.
- ^ Nortel Networks (2007). "Nortel Netaş". Archived from the original on September 3, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2007.
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- ^ "Profile: Jean C. Monty". Forbes. Archived from the original on May 23, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2017.
Sources
- Bruce, Robert V. Bell: Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude Archived January 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8014-9691-8.
- Hunter, Douglas (2002). The Bubble and the Bear: How Nortel Burst the Canadian Dream. Doubleday Canada. ISBN 0-385-65918-0.
- Macdonald, Larry (2000). Nortel Networks. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-64542-7.
- Rens, Jean-Guy; Roth, Käthe (2001). The Invisible Empire: A History of the Telecommunications Industry in Canada. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-2052-3.
- Reville, F. Douglas. History of the County of Brant: Illustrated With Fifty Half-Tones Taken From Miniatures And Photographs, Brantford, ON: Brant Historical Society, Hurley Printing, 1920. Retrieved from Brantford.Library.on.ca May 4, 2012.
External links
- Official website[permanent dead link ]
- Nortel Networks Inc., the US subsidiary
- Northern Electric - A Brief History (from Bell System Memorial)
- Business data for Nortel:
- Nortel
- Defunct telecommunications companies of Canada
- Defunct manufacturing companies of Canada
- Defunct VoIP companies
- Accounting scandals
- Bell System
- BCE Inc. acquisitions
- Electronics companies of Canada
- Networking companies of the United States
- Networking hardware companies
- Telecommunications equipment vendors
- VoIP companies of Canada
- History of telecommunications
- Corporate spin-offs
- Telecommunications companies established in 1895
- Manufacturing companies disestablished in 2013
- 1895 establishments in Quebec
- 2013 disestablishments in Ontario
- Companies formerly listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange
- Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2009
- Companies that have filed for bankruptcy in Canada
- Defunct companies of Ontario
- Telecommunications companies disestablished in 2013
- Canadian companies disestablished in 2013
- Canadian companies established in 1895