FierceWirelessFierceWirelessEuropeFierceDeveloperFierceMobileContentFierceBroadbandWirelessFierceVoIPFierceIPTVFierceTelecomFierceOnlineVideoFierceCable

Free Newsletter

About | View Sample | Privacy
Related Topics >> patents | nortel networks | LTE | IPR | Cdma | Bankruptcy

Does Nortel have aspirations of being an LTE patent company?

Tools

Are Nortel's LTE patents worth enough for the company to emerge from bankruptcy as a stand-alone company that licenses LTE IPR?

That is the speculation among industry pundits since Nortel held on to the majority of its patents in the sale of its CDMA and LTE wireless assets to Ericsson. While JP Morgan analyst Ehud Gelblum pegged the royalty figure as high as $2.9 billion in a research note earlier this summer, other analysts believe the figure is overblown since the $2.9 billion figure is based on the assumption that Nortel's IP could get a royalty rate of 1 percent of every LTE device sold. Moreover, the number of LTE patents Nortel holds is unclear, ranging from 1,300 to more than 5,000.

The idea of a new Nortel was given further impetus when the company announced last week an extension of protection from Canadian creditors, and said it would continue to "assess other restructuring alternatives".

Those believing in the resurrection of Nortel also point to the increasing interest by RIM to acquire the LTE assets since RIM isn't an infrastructure player and likely won't become one. Speculation is that RIM wants the LTE patents to boost its position the LTE value chain.

For more:
- see Rethink Wireless

Related articles:
Analyst: Nortel's LTE patent value may be overblown
Nortel keeping key LTE patents
Ericsson emerges as winner of Nortel's CDMA, LTE assets


SHARE
WITH:
Email Twitter Facebook LinkedIn StumbleUpon
Get Your FREE FierceBroadbandWireless Email Newsletter:

Comments (1) | Post a comment
More stories about patents   nortel networks   LTE   IPR   Cdma   Bankruptcy  

Comments

I'd like to give two comments to help in understanding the Nortel's LTE patent portfolio. 1. Licensing market: Most of Nortel's patents for OFDM/MIMO technologies are for the downlink (base station to mobile handset), which means the licensing market will be mostly the base station equipments. 2. Essentiality for standards: Not all Nortel's LTE patents will be essential for the 3GPP's LTE standard specifications, which means the royalty will depend on the total share of Nortel's LTE essential patents among LTE patent licensing contenders: for details, please refer 'Nortel's LTE Patents for Baseband Products: Key for Patent Value Estimation' by TechIPm, LLC.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

To combat spam, please enter the code in the image.