Speculation is once again rife that China's technology icon Huawei
Technologies will buy the struggling British communications giant Marconi Corp
Plc.
Such an acquisition, if completed, together with Lenovo and TCL's
high-profile overseas binge in the past few months, underlines the growing
desire of Chinese firms to buy their way into the world's big leagues.
There have been rumours since May that Huawei, the top telecoms equipment
maker in China, will purchase Marconi.
Huawei denied it before Marconi on Monday acknowledged it is in talks with
third parties for "potential business combinations," which put Huawei under the
spotlight.
"The discussions are at a preliminary stage and there can be no assurance
that an offer will ultimately take place," Marconi said in a statement.
Yesterday Huawei's spokesman Fu Jun would not comment on the speculation.
Just a few days ago Fu told China Daily that Huawei was not interested in a
takeover deal with Marconi as Huawei is not a public firm and does not have a
lot of spare cash to hand.
There have also been rumours that Huawei will buy German giant Siemens'
mobile phone unit before Taiwan's BenQ finally landed the deal.
Chris Han, a senior analyst with Norson Telecon Consulting, said the
possibility of a Huawei-Marconi merger is high.
Under a memorandum of understanding signed in January, the two firms agreed
to distribute each other's products to key customers. British media said the
deal could be worth about US$1 billion.
This distribution partnership could have paved the way for a takeover deal,
the analyst said.
He said Huawei will not pay a high price for a takeover as Marconi has been
struggling for a long time and its shares have hit a record low.
"Huawei has long been focusing on developing countries and taking over
Marconi would give it faster access to the European and US markets," he said.
That could help Huawei be even more competitive, able to challenge Western
giants like Cisco Systems.
Huawei has singled out Europe as the major growth market overseas with an
ambitious target to triple its annual sales there this year.
In 2004, it recorded US$200 million in contract sales in Europe. Its annual
overseas sales hit US$2.28 billion.
Huawei's overseas sales in the first half of this year stood at US$2.47
billion.
Some analysts speculate that behind the rumoured takeover are Huawei's
efforts to seek a backdoor listing via Marconi.
The Chinese firm has been seeking overseas listings but its efforts have been
thwarted by its complicated ownership structure. It has said it is 100 per cent
owned by its employees.
A takeover of Marconi could potentially offer faster access for Huawei to get
listed overseas; Marconi is listed on the London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ.
Wang Guoping, an analyst with China Galaxy Securities, said Hong Kong might
be the best place for Huawei to get listed as the city is near its headquarters
in Shenzhen.
"I think Huawei will be able to eventually get listed in New York even
without Marconi (as long as it settles its ownership structure)," Wang said.
"It's unnecessary for Huawei to buy Marconi to facilitate its overseas
listings," he added.