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Genuity Buys Time

Genuity proved that $100 million will buy you anything when the company purchased two weeks' time to put together a financing plan in the wake of Verizon's departure.

by Colin C. Haley
of boston.internet.com
[July 31, 2002]
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Genuity (NASDAQ: GENU) has made a $100 million acquisition, but it didn't gain another company, patented technology and new production plant. Instead, it purchased something perhaps more valuable—time.

The Woburn, Mass., provider of Internet protocol networking services wrote checks to eight lenders for a two-week "standstill agreement" that will hopefully allow it to revise its credit terms.

Genuity is still reeling from Verizon Communications' (NYSE: VZ) decision last week not to re-integrate the company.

The New York phone giant based its decision on a "variety of factors, including market conditions and Verizon's business needs." Industry watchers said Verizon saw no use in adding overhead when it could still contract for Internet services from Genuity and others.

"We are evaluating all of our options, as there are many potential paths to take," said Paul R. Gudonis, Genuity chairman and CEO.

To help it, Genuity has retained Lazard Freres & Co. as its financial advisor. The most attractive is finding another large telecommunications partner to take a stake. But with carriers melting down because of external (the economy) or internal (accounting fraud) factors, serious contenders are few.

That may leave Genuity with the unpleasant task of restructuring. For days, Gudonis has maintained that the Verizon pullout (which he claims caught him by surprise) as a non-fatal blow.

"I want to assure our employees, customers, and suppliers that, with $1.2 billion in cash, business operations will continue without interruption, and we will provide our customers with the service and support they have come to expect from Genuity," Gudonis said.

With the creditor deal, Genuity has bought itself two weeks, however, after that, the clock begins ticking again.

— End

Related articles:
  [July 26, 2002] Genuity, Jilted by Verizon, Mulls Options
  [Oct. 2, 2001] Genuity Floats $1.15 Billion In Bonds
  [Dec. 1, 2000] Verizon Raises Outlook Through 2002

 

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