Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario Court Judge Approves Rogers-mobilicity Wireless Takeover Deal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2015 12:04 PM
  • Ontario Court Judge Approves Rogers-mobilicity Wireless Takeover Deal
TORONTO — An Ontario court has given its OK to a deal that will see Rogers Communications purchase Mobilicity.
 
Rogers (TSX:RCI.B) will also sell some spectrum to Wind Mobile, which has emerged as one of the leading challengers to Canada's three biggest wireless companies.
 
Rogers says Industry Canada has also approved its takeover offer for Mobilicity but still requires approval by the Competition Bureau.
 
"The transaction with Rogers provides the best possible outcome for Mobilicity's customers, dealers and employees," Mobilicity president Anthony Booth said in a statement.
 
"Rogers ensures certainty of service for Mobilicity customers, provides a great network, national coverage and high quality products and services. At the same time, Mobilicity employees will have the opportunity to work at a great Canadian company in Rogers."
 
Court documents said the Mobilicity offer was worth a total of $465-million but the Rogers announcement said the purchase price was $440 million.
 
In addition, Rogers said it would pay $100 million to Shaw, in addition to previous downpayments, to complete a previously announced purchase of spectrum that the Calgary-based company hasn't used for a wireless business.
 
Rogers chief executive Guy Laurence said the company "got the spectrum we needed" while working with the government to put unused spectrum to work.
 
Mobilicity is in five urban markets — Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.
 
Wind Mobile also competes in those cities and currently has about 800,000 customers, which is about one-tenth the subscriber base of any of the big three carriers — Rogers, Telus and BCE's Bell (TSX:BCE).
 
A Telus spokesman said the company wouldn't comment Wednesday on the announcements.
 
The federal government had blocked Telus over concerns that one of Canada's three large national carriers would acquire wireless spectrum that had been set aside for newer companies, including Mobilicity.
 
A sworn statement by William Aziz, who has been overseeing Mobilicity's restructuring since April 2013,  said it's his under standing "that Industry Canada no longer has the same concerns it once did about 'undue spectrum concentration' among certain wireless carriers in Canada."
 
Aziz also says in an affadavit filed with the court that the directors of Mobilicity's holding company negotiated with competing bidders for about two weeks before deciding on Tuesday to accept the Rogers offer.
 
Rogers said Wednesday that the $440 million purchase price will be offset by tax losses valued at about $175 million that the company will acquire.

MORE National ARTICLES

Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths
A task force appointed by the provincial government after two New Brunswick boys were killed by an African rock python in 2013 is calling for the immediate inspection of all sites where exotic animals are kept.

Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces

Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces
A man who jumped onto the back of a moose as it swam across a lake could face animal-harassment charges in British Columbia, but would likely escape the threat of prosecution for a similar stunt in another province given Canada's patchwork of animal-rights laws

Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces

Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death

Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death
Elizabeth Cromwell sued the province earlier this month, alleging a lack of control over the potentially deadly drug led to the death of Clayton Cromwell on April 7, 2014.

Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death

Federal Court Orders Public Safety Minister, Rcmp To Hand Over Gun Registry Data

OTTAWA — A Federal Court judge has ordered that Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney and the RCMP commissioner immediately hand over an external hard drive containing a copy of all Quebec gun registry data.

Federal Court Orders Public Safety Minister, Rcmp To Hand Over Gun Registry Data

Canadian Olympic Committee Launches Campaign To Promote LGBTQ Inclusion

Canadian Olympic Committee Launches Campaign To Promote LGBTQ Inclusion
TORONTO — In the moments before Anastasia Bucsis stepped on the ice to race, when her sole focus should have been on what she had to do to win, the speedskater would be consumed by worries that went way beyond sport.

Canadian Olympic Committee Launches Campaign To Promote LGBTQ Inclusion

Air India Bombing Probe Is 'Active And Ongoing': RCMP

Air India Bombing Probe Is 'Active And Ongoing': RCMP
Three decades on, the RCMP says its investigation into the Air India bombing -- the worst terrorist act in Canadian history -- remains "active and ongoing."

Air India Bombing Probe Is 'Active And Ongoing': RCMP