ENN - Electric News.net
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Edit your alerts
News
   CORRECTIONS
Survey
Let us know how to make ENN better!
Take our reader's survey.
Adworld

Face-to-Face: Dinesh Dhamija, CEO Ebookers
Don't look now, but e-travel is booming -- and strangely, its successes are coming only after the dot-bomb and September 11, events that decimated related industries. Matthew Clark spoke with Dinesh Dhamija, CEO of highflying European e-travel firms Ebookers, as the company considers acquisitions, market share and the future.
More here

 

The following e-mail will be sent on your behalf.

 has sent the following story to you from ElectricNews.net.

The story is available from https://electricnews.net/news.html?code=8396348

WorldCom to shut down its mobile arm
Monday, July 29 2002
by Matthew Clark


Bankrupt telecom WorldCom has shut down its wireless unit and made two
appointments to guide it through the months ahead. The company said on Monday that it had reached agreements to move its mobile
phone customers to other service providers and by the end of September the
loss-making mobile unit would be closed. AT&T Wireless Services, Verizon
Wireless, Alltel Corp and a fourth, un-named carrier will take up WorldCom's
customers.

The company's wireless unit functions as an MVNO (mobile virtual network
operator), which means that it does not own a network. Instead the business buys
airtime from other operators and re-sells it under its own brand. WorldCom
claimed that through this business it was generating around USD1 billion in
revenue annually from almost 2 million customers. Shutting the money-losing
business will save WorldCom as much as USD700 million per year, the company said.


WorldCom said that it had completed the deal before it filed for bankruptcy,
which means that the bankruptcy court overseeing the telecom's actions did not
have to approve the agreements.

With regard to the company's bankruptcy proceedings, WorldCom made two new
appointments to help guide it through the coming months. In a statement, WorldCom
said that Gregory F. Rayburn will be the firm's new chief restructuring officer
and that John S. Dubel will become the company's latest chief financial officer.


The two executives are both principals with AlixPartners LLC, a
corporate-restructuring firm, and they will both report to Chief Executive
Officer John Sidgmore. Dubel will now fill the shoes of former chief financial
officer Scott Sullivan, who was fired last month after the company said it
misreported USD3.85 billion in expenses over five quarters. That
misrepresentation prompted the company to become the subject of an investigation
by US regulators, who have charged it with fraud.

In their new roles, Rayburn and Dubel face the daunting task of negotiating with
creditors and overseeing asset sales and will be expected to provide information
to investors, regulators and other officials.

Rayburn has been with AlixPartners since August 2000 and most recently he worked
as chief executive officer and chief restructuring officer at Sunterra Corp,
WorldCom said. That company, a time-share operator, recently completed its
restructuring after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection over two years
ago. Rayburn is a certified public accountant and a certified fraud examiner.

Dubel, who joined AlixPartners this year, has served as chief restructuring
officer and chief operating officer at CellNet Data Systems Inc. He is a
certified insolvency and reorganization accountant, WorldCom said.

"These appointments are an important step in moving WorldCom forward,"
Sidgmore said in a statement. "In a short time, we have secured two of the most
highly qualified and experienced restructuring executives available," he said.
"Their task will be to support our efforts to emerge from reorganisation as
quickly as possible with a healthy business focused on its core capabilities.
During this process, WorldCom will continue to provide world-class services to
our customers," Sidgmore added.

The appointments are subject to approval from the bankruptcy court.

In related news, selection begins on Monday in New York for a panel of as many as
15 people to who will steer WorldCom through the stages of its bankruptcy
proceedings. It will be the committee's job to negotiate how much the company
will pay creditors and will decide which attorneys, accountants and investment
bankers are hired. Members of the committee will be chosen from among WorldCom's
existing creditors.


Search

Jobs
ENN Corporate Services Ad Red Moon Media Ad ENN Message Boards House Ad
Powered by The CIA
Designed by Redmoon media

 

© Copyright ElectricNews.Net Ltd 1999-2002.