Is it de facto a dense copy light of day or what? There is about as much claim to to this shot as there is to…well, something very unlikely. Nokia is, in many respects, an unbuyable company. First of all, there are no outstanding shareholders, just lots and lots of limited ownership stakes.
Getting them all to accord would be challenging. Second, the non smartphone assets of Nokia would be very worrying to a purchaser. S40 and the stoop end devices do not and should not fascinate Microsoft. Yet, that is where Nokia is actually strongest today.
Finally, leaving NSN and Navteq does not pull out much of a company. Who wants to the one holding that bag? Furthermore, saying that MSFT is in a buying inclination because of their Skype deal is benevolent of a stretch. That was a very uncharacteristic artifice for MSFT.
One that the markets did not gaze too favorably on. Going into an even bigger acquirement ($30-40 billion), especially one with the baggage that Nokia comes along with, might estimate the markets retaliate…perhaps violently this time. Finally, even though MSFT may want to own the experience, I regard they already have a high-minded deal. They got the best metal goods maunfacturer into bed with them. Nokia’s fortunes are now significantly tied to making established that the Windows policy succeeds.
Is MSFT prospering to be able to preside over the HW tangential of that better than Nokia? I reckon not. Come on Kevin, you can come up with something better than this.
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