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To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (137)2/5/2002 7:57:01 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 356
 
You' re failing to grasp my point that is: ALA concentration of all their business in telecom was a bad strategy by Tchuruk.
He put all his eggs in only one basket. The basket that has now splattered all his eggs all over the place! Get it now?

If you are thinking that a renewed purchasing cycle is about to start and will left AAL of its dire straits, you just have to look for their market. Yes, the guys that buy their stuff: Long distance carriers such as WCOM, Level 3 Communications, Global Crossing.

Innovations News:
w4.siemens.de



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (137)2/6/2002 1:31:41 PM
From: larry pollock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 356
 
D.Telekom, Siemens deal worth 350 mln euros -source
6 Feb 2002, 10:51am ET

- - - - -
BERLIN, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Deutsche Telekom's order for new generation mobile phone technology from Siemens AG will be worth around 350 million euros ($305.4 million), sources close to the deal told Reuters on Wednesday.

The sources said the German telecoms giant was also expected to sign UMTS equipment supply deals with Finland's Nokia (HELS:NOK1V) and Nortel Inc (TSE:NT)(NYSE:NT) by the end of the second quarter. The orders were expected to be worth a sum in the triple digit millions of euros.

Deutsche Telekom and Siemens signed a 10-year agreement on Wednesday under which Siemens will deliver UMTS mobile networks and switching systems to Germany's biggest mobile operator.

Copyright 2002, Reuters News Service



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (137)2/12/2002 9:14:49 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
Siemens rules out cellphone partnership for now - report
By Reuters staff

12 February 2002

German electronics and engineering group Siemens AG has ruled out a strategic partnership at its mobile phone unit in the near future, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

The newspaper quoted Rudi Lamprecht, head of Siemens ICM mobile communications unit, as saying that while scale was important, he was not simply interested in buying market share.

"All has to be done in a profitable fashion," he said.

Lamprecht also dismissed suggestions that ICM was seeking a dramatically increased presence in the United States, which accounts for only three percent of its sales.

In November, Volker Jung, the head of Siemens Information and Communication (I&C) division, said the company was holding talks with several other mobile telephone handset makers.

The ICM unit - part of the I&C division - had an operating profit of 37 million euros ($32.57 million) during the first quarter to the end of December, down from 219 million a year ago.



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (137)2/21/2002 12:50:39 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
Siemens makes forecast for ICM division Borsen-Zeitung - Germany; Feb 21, 2002

Siemens AG, the German electronics group, announced yesterday that it aimed to increase its global market share for mobile telephones from 8 per cent to 15 per cent during the next three years. The group left open, however, whether the turnover increase would be provided by internal growth or acquisitions.

Last week, Rudi Lamprecht, director of the group's mobile information and communications division (ICM), revealed that Siemens did not intend to carry out acquisitions. He stressed that the group would grow faster than its competitors this year by increasing mobile telephone sales figures by 10 per cent. Siemens aims at a market share of more than 25 per cent in Brazil and Latin America in the long run.