Nokia
is paying 170 million euros (U.S. $191 million) to acquire French fitness
gadgets company Withings in a bid to get into the digital health market, according to a report by pcworld.com.
For
the Espoo, Finland company, which sold its handset business to Microsoft two
years ago, and has been since mainly in the area of selling telecom equipment,
the acquisition marks a strong push into connected healthcare and home
products, ranging from activity trackers, weighing scales, thermometers, blood
pressure monitors, and home and baby monitors.
Nokia’s
brand, which is still well-regarded in many consumer markets, may aid the
company as it enters new segments and starts what it describes as a “new
chapter.”
“With
this acquisition, Nokia is strengthening its position in the Internet of Things
in a way that leverages the power of our trusted brand, fits with our company
purpose of expanding the human possibilities of the connected world, and puts
us at the heart of a very large addressable market where we can make a
meaningful difference in peoples’ lives,” Nokia President and CEO Rajeev Suri
said Tuesday.
The
cash transaction is expected to close in the early part of the third quarter of
this year, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.
After the acquisition Withings, with about 200 employees, will be part of the
Nokia Technologies advanced technology and licensing business, which was set up
in 2014 to leverage Nokia’s brand and patents, and is also charged with
licensing the Nokia brand to consumer device makers.
Nokia
Technologies ventured into the virtual reality market in November 2015 with a
VR camera targeted at professional content creators. Withings’ Activite Steel is
a smartwatch that tracks various health parameters and synchronizes the
information to the user’s app to give in-depth metrics and even personal
coaching. The company also offers a home security device with video
capabilities that can be linked to a smartphone or smartwatch, and a weighing
scale that posts and analyzes information on an app on the smartphone.
The
products “help you understand how your body responds to activity and
changes—the impact your activity is having on your body temperature, your
weight, your blood pressure and your heart. And they do it with such a
beautiful design that you love to wear them anywhere—at work, at home, or even
at the opera,” wrote Ramzi Haidamus, president of Nokia Technologies in a post.
Nokia
said in January it had acquired control of another telecom gear maker
Alcatel-Lucent, completing a process that started last year. It said it
would move quickly to combine the two companies and execute its integration
plans. The company also announced in December that it sold its Here digital
mapping and location services business to a consortium consisting of Audi, BMW
and Daimler.
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