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Quarterhill Inc T.QTRH

Alternate Symbol(s):  QTRHF | T.QTRH.DB

Quarterhill Inc. is a Canada-based company, which is engaged in providing of tolling and enforcement solutions in the intelligent transportation system (ITS) industry. The Company is focused on the acquisition, management and growth of companies that provide integrated, tolling and mobility systems and solutions to the ITS industry as well as its adjacent markets. The Company’s solutions include congestion charging, performance management, insights & analytics, analytics, toll interoperability, mobility marketplace, maintenance, e-screening, tire anomaly detection, multi-modal data, intersection management, and others. Its tolling includes roadside technologies, commerce and mobility platforms, audit and enforcement, and tolling services. Its safety and enforcement comprise commercial vehicles, automated enforcement, freight mobility, smart transportation, and data solutions. The Company’s wholly owned subsidiary is International Road Dynamics Inc.


TSX:QTRH - Post by User

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Post by Wolfensteinon Sep 01, 2011 11:48am
313 Views
Post# 19002760

Mosaid sees rescue in its Nokia-Microsoft deal

Mosaid sees rescue in its Nokia-Microsoft deal
Mosaid sees rescue in its Nokia-Microsoft deal
15 minutes ago - Reuters
Mosaid sees rescue in its Nokia-Microsoft deal

By Alastair Sharp

TORONTO (Reuters) - A patent licensing pact reached with tech giants Nokia and Microsoft will transform Canada's Mosaid Technologies MSD.TO, its CEO said on Thursday, and could help protect it from a C$480 million ($490 million) hostile takeover bid.

Mosaid said it will buy about 2,000 wireless patents from Core Wireless, which holds them for Nokia NOK1V.HE and Microsoft (MSFT).

Mosaid said it will pay nothing for the patents, but will shoulder the costs of reaching licensing deals with other companies and take a one-third cut of any deals made.

The deal is "transformative" for Mosaid and revenue from future licensing will likely exceed the company's revenue from its first 35 years in business, Mosaid Chief Executive John Lindgren told Reuters.

"The numbers from this are going to be potentially so large as to make up the majority of our revenues going forward," he said.

Under the terms of the deal, any change in ownership of the patents would need to be approved by both Nokia and Microsoft, which earlier this year tied up in a deal for Microsoft to provide the operating system for Nokia phones.

The agreement complicates the takeover picture for WiLan Inc WIN.TO, a fellow Ottawa-based patent licensing firm that is offering C$38 a share for Mosaid with the aim of creating a company with global scale.

Investors cheered the Nokia-Microsoft deal, pushing Mosaid's shares up 3.6 percent to C$41.91.

Before Wi-Lan's hostile bid, Mosaid shares had traded in a range of C$25 to C$35 this year.

Mosaid, which gets most of its revenue from licensing semiconductor technology but has moved aggressively into wireless, has said WiLan's offer grossly undervalues it.

Lindgren said the wireless patents that it now has the right to license are stronger than those included in a $4.5 billion sale earlier this year of patents belonging to bankrupt Nortel Networks NRTLQ.PK.

"We stack this portfolio up next to that (Nortel), this one's stronger," he said, adding that Nortel had 498 patents claimed essential to various standards globally versus the 1,215 that Mosaid just acquired.

Lindgren said that in the emerging wireless broadband technology known as long-term evolution (LTE), Mosaid can claim 169 patents compared with the 277 that Nortel had, while Mosaid has more than 900 patents for current 3G technology versus the 11 that Nortel had.

Mosaid, which had been working on the acquisition of the patents since March, maintained its financial outlook for 2012.

It expects adjusted earnings of C$2-$2.12 a share on revenue of C$85 million-C$90 million. Analysts on average expect earnings of C$2.12 per share on revenue of C$86 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Mosaid's acquisition marks the latest in a string of deals in the patent licensing space, including Google's (GOOG) $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility (MMI) in August.

Mosaid is expected to respond to Wi-Lan's unsolicited bid by September 7.

($1=
.98 Canadian)

(Reporting by Alastair Sharp and Pav Jordan, additional reporting by Abhiram Nandakumar in Bangalore; editing by Peter Galloway)

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