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Nortel Goes Bankrupt

Technology giant filed for bankruptcy protection in Canada and the U.S. on Wednesday, the first major technology company to file for protection during the global downturn.

TORONTO (AP) -- Telecommunications equipment maker Nortel Networks Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection in Canada and the U.S. on Wednesday, becoming the first major technology company to take that step in this global downturn.

Facing a sharp drop in orders from phone companies, Nortel filed for court protection a day before it was due to make a debt payment of $107 million. Protection from its creditors would give the company more opportunities to explore restructuring options or sell off assets.

The long-struggling Toronto-based company said in a release that it had been in the process of a turnaround since late 2005, but "the global financial crisis and recession have compounded Nortel's financial challenges and directly impacted its ability to complete this transformation."

"Nortel must be put on a sound financial footing once and for all," Nortel's chief executive, Mike Zafirovski, said in the statement.

As of its last quarterly filing, Nortel had $4.5 billion in debt and $2.4 billion in cash. Nortel said Wednesday its cash position remains $2.4 billion, but it did not immediately reveal its total assets or its debt load.

However, the filing in Delaware revealed that one unsecured creditor alone, Bank of New York Mellon Corp., is owed nearly $4 billion.

During the 1990s telecom and Internet boom, Nortel had more than 95,000 employees and a market capitalization of $297 billion. At one point in 2000 it accounted for one-third of the market value on the entire Toronto Stock Exchange.

When trading closed Tuesday, before the bankruptcy filing halted trading in Nortel's shares Wednesday, Nortel's market value was just $155 million. Its work force was down to about 30,000 people in Nortel's last update.

Nortel has been attempting to recover for years from an accounting crisis that sparked shareholder lawsuits, regulatory investigations and the firing of key executives, including CEO Frank Dunn.

Nortel spokesman Mohammed Nakhooda declined to comment on what assets Nortel will now try to sell off. It is also unclear what the bankruptcy will mean for Nortel's sponsorships of the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver and the 2012 Games in London in 2012.

Since Nortel acknowledged in December that it was considering a bankruptcy filing, analysts have split over the wisdom of it.

"They would gain very little out of the bankruptcy filing and lose a lot," CreditSights analyst Ping Zhao said in a recent interview. Given the long-term service contracts associated with telecommunications network equipment, "you have to really convince your customers that you're going to be around."

On the other hand, without protection from creditors, Nortel faced a shrinking pool of options. The recession hit information-technology spending worldwide, and frozen credit markets made it more difficult to sell off business units to raise cash. The company has yet to find a buyer for its Metro Ethernet unit, which it has been shopping since September.

In the meantime, some customers have been delaying orders from Nortel as the company's viability has come into question, UBS analyst Nikos Theodosopoulos said.

"Nortel has enough cash to run its business this year and probably a good part of next year as well," he said. But he added that a bankruptcy would give the company "a better chance to preserve itself."

AP Business Writer Andrew Vanacore in New York contributed to this report.

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