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BCE Inc.

BCE Inc., an abbreviation of its full name Bell Canada Enterprises Inc., is a publicly traded Canadian holding company for Bell Canada, which includes telecommunications providers and various mass media assets under its subsidiary Bell Media Inc.[2] Founded through a corporate reorganization in 1983, when Bell Canada, Northern Telecom, and other related companies all became subsidiaries of Bell Canada Enterprises Inc., it is one of Canada's largest corporations. The company is headquartered at 1 Carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell[3] in the Verdun borough of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Bell Canada Enterprises Inc.
BCE Inc.
Company typePublic
Industry
Founded1983; 41 years ago (1983)
HeadquartersVerdun, Quebec, Canada[1]
Key people
Products
Revenue CA$23.96 billion (FY19)
CA$7.96 billion (FY19)
CA$3.25 billion (FY19)
Total assets CA$60.15 billion (FY19)
Number of employees
52,100 (2019)
Subsidiaries
Websitebce.ca

BCE Inc. is a component of the S&P/TSX 60 and is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange and the American-based New York Stock Exchange. It was ranked as Canada's 17th largest corporation by revenue as of June 2014,[4] and as the ninth-largest by capitalization as of June 2015.[5]

History edit

 
Logo used by the Bell Telephone Company of Canada from 1902 to 1922

The Bell Telephone Company of Canada Ltd. was created by an act of Parliament on 29 April 1880.[6] Later known as Bell Canada, its charter granted it the right to construct telephone lines alongside all public rights-of-way in Canada. Under a licensing agreement with the US-based American Bell Telephone Company, Bell also manufactured telephones and telephone equipment, an activity that would be spun off in a separate company that later became Northern Telecom and then Nortel Networks.

In 1983, all of the Bell Canada group of companies (also known as the "Bell Group") were placed under a new holding company, Bell Canada Enterprises Inc. (BCE).[7] This corporate reorganization resulted in Bell Canada and its subsidiaries, including Northern Telecom (later Nortel Networks) and over 80 others, becoming subsidiaries of the new holding company, BCE. Under the new parent, each company was owned directly by BCE, which had the benefit of freeing the manufacturing company, Nortel, and other holdings from the heavily regulated telephone company, Bell Canada. Under a variety of leaders, BCE has embarked on a series of diversifications, consolidations, and corporate strategies.[8] In 1988, Bell Canada Enterprises was shortened to BCE Inc.

Diversification and expansion edit

In 1983, A. Jean de Grandpré, chairman of Bell Canada, was appointed as the first chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of BCE.[9] The company soon embarked on a major diversification into property development, the energy sector, financial services, and other sectors. Within a few years, it became the first Canadian company to report CAD$1 billion in profits.

When Jean Monty assumed the job of CEO in 1998, he pursued a convergence strategy, attempting to combine both content creation and distribution within BCE, and to take greater advantage of the emerging Internet market. BCE's acquisition in 2000 (and subsequent financing) of overseas carrier Teleglobe cost billions of dollars. BCE sold Teleglobe two years later; Jean Monty resigned and was succeeded by Michael Sabia as CEO.[10][11]

Refocus on core business edit

Michael Sabia refocused BCE on its core telecommunications business, prompting BCE to buy back the 20% share in Bell Canada that it had sold in 1999 to Ameritech (later acquired by SBC Corporation).[12] BCE also spun off operating units that it did not consider to be core to its business, including Emergis in 2004, and Bell Globemedia and Telesat Canada in 2006.

On February 1, 2006, stating the need to remain competitive, Bell Canada announced job cuts of 3,000 to 4,000 employees by the end of 2006.[13]

On April 28, BCE announced that CEO Michael Sabia was taking a 455% pay increase; his salary being raised from C$1.21 million to $6.71 million. The pay included a $1.25 million salary, a $2.2 million bonus that Sabia converted to deferred share units, a long-term incentive payout of $3 million and other compensation, the filing shows. Bell Canada also posted record revenue increases for the previous fiscal year.[citation needed]

Under pressure from investors, on October 11, 2006, BCE announced it would be wound down, with its remaining assets converted to an income trust so its income could be distributed directly to shareholders through dividends, avoiding corporate taxes.[14] The new entity was planned to be named "Bell Canada Income Fund". As part of this restructuring, Bell Aliant offered to take Bell Nordiq private, while remaining separate from the new Bell trust.[15] Due to announced changes in taxation law by the Canadian federal government, on December 12, 2006, BCE announced it would not proceed with its planned conversion to an income trust.[16][17] It then started planning a restructuring that would have eliminated the BCE holding company,[18][19] but this was put on hold when the company began attracting takeover bids.

In February 2021, and in line with the growing importance of 5G wireless networks, BCE announces the launch of the largest investment program in its history to double the proportion of Canadians covered.[20]

Proposed takeover edit

Due to its stagnant share price, starting in April 2007, BCE was courted for acquisition by pension funds and private equity groups, including a consortium led by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (with Kohlberg Kravis Roberts as one of the participants), a consortium led by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (OTPP), and a consortium that included Cerberus Capital Management.[21] On June 30, 2007, BCE accepted a bid of $42.75 per share in cash, for a total valuation of $51.7 billion, from the group led by the OTPP, and including Providence Equity Partners, Madison Dearborn Partners, Merrill Lynch Global Private Equity, and Toronto-Dominion Bank. The proposed deal would have been the largest acquisition in Canadian history and the largest leveraged buyout ever.[22][23] The deal was approved by BCE shareholders,[24] Quebec Superior Court[25] (whose ruling was overturned by the Quebec Court of Appeal,[26] but was later upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada[27]), and the CRTC, subject to certain conditions for its corporate governance structure to ensure that Bell remained under Canadian control.[28] (See BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders for further information).

Due to the tightening of the credit market caused by the subprime mortgage crisis, the investment banks financing the deal – led by Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland – started negotiations on May 16, 2008, to revise the terms of their loans with greater interest rates and greater restrictions to protect themselves.[23] On July 4, 2008, BCE announced that a final agreement had been reached on the terms of the purchase,[29] with all financing in place, and Michael Sabia left BCE, with George Cope assuming the position of CEO on July 11.[30]

On November 26, 2008, BCE announced that KPMG had informed BCE that it would not be able to issue a statement on the solvency of the company after its privatization, one of the required conditions of the buyout. As a result, the purchase was cancelled.[31][32]

Expanding again into mass media edit

 
A Bell Media/CTV antenna in Ottawa, 2010. BCE Inc. gained full control of CTVglobemedia in 2010.

With Shaw Communications purchasing the Global Television Network, Vidéotron launching its wireless telephone network with video content as a key selling point,[33] and the enormous popularity of wireless and Internet video and other media streams at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics,[34] Bell once again sought to bring a content provider into its portfolio. In September 2010, Bell announced a deal to reacquire full control of the broadcasting properties owned by CTVglobemedia including the CTV Television Network. Bell also obtained a 15% interest in The Globe and Mail, CTVglobemedia's other major asset, with the remaining 85% owned by the Thomson family.[35] Through this acquisition, Bell responded to an increasing trend away from traditional cable and satellite delivery channels and towards new distribution methods over the Internet and wireless networks.[36] The CRTC approved the transaction in March 2011.[37]

In 2016, BCE announced that it had entered an agreement to acquire Manitoba Telecom Services (MTS) in a transaction worth $3.9 billion. The deal was approved by both companies' shareholders and boards of directors, and closed in March 2017 after the Competition Bureau and other agencies approved of the acquisition.[38]

Major subsidiaries edit

As of 2016, BCE Inc. has three primary divisions: Bell Canada, Bell Mobility, and Bell Media, comprising over 80% of BCE's revenue.[39] Bell Aliant was a subsidiary company formed in 1999 from the merger of the four BCE-controlled telephone companies serving Canada's Atlantic provinces. In 2016, the operations of Bell Aliant were consolidated into those of Bell Canada.[40]

Its Bell MTS Inc. subsidiary, owns 100% of its Bell Canada division which includes Bell Aliant, Bell Mobility, Bell Satellite TV, Bell Media, Bell Fibe TV, Virgin Mobile Canada and Lucky Mobile. Bell's flanker wireless brand, Virgin Mobile was officially rebranded to Virgin Plus on July 19, 2021 to reflect the brand's evolution beyond just wireless offerings which now includes Virgin Plus Internet as well as Virgin Plus TV. [41]

The Bell Media assets include three Canadian conventional television networks, CTV, CTV 2 and Noovo along with dozens of specialty television channels including BNN Bloomberg, CTV Comedy Channel, CTV News Channel, CTV Drama Channel, CTV Sci-Fi Channel, MTV Canada, MTV2 Canada, Much, E!, TSN, RDS and 109 licensed radio stations in 58 markets across the country, all part of the iHeartRadio brand and streaming service.[42] In 2014, Bell launched their CraveTV streaming service which offers the latest originals from Crave, HBO, HBO Max and Showtime, exclusive access to the entire HBO library, the biggest Hollywood blockbusters, and the best French-language content in Canada.[43]

BCE also owns 18% of the Montreal Canadiens ice hockey club, and (together with BCE's pension plan) a 37.5% interest in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (owner of several Toronto sports franchises).[44]

Bell Canada edit

 
Bell Canada headquarters in Montreal. The telecommunications company is a subsidiary of BCE Inc.

Bell Canada formed the primary historic core of the company in central, Atlantic, and northern Canada.

Bell Media edit

 
Bell Media headquarters at 299 Queen Street West in Toronto. The company is BCE's mass media subsidiary.

Bell Media is the BCE broadcast and media subsidiary. In 2000, BCE bought the CTV Television Network for $2.3 billion. The company combined CTV with its holdings in The Globe and Mail newspaper to form Bell Globemedia, with BCE owning 70% and Thomson Newspapers and Woodbridge Co. Ltd. the remainder. In 2005, BCE sold its controlling interest in Bell Globemedia for $183 million to Woodbridge, Torstar, and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, with BCE retaining a 20% stake.[45][46] The company was subsequently renamed CTVglobemedia. In 2007, it acquired most assets of CHUM Limited. In 2010, BCE bought out the other owners, acquiring CTV's specialty television, digital media, conventional TV and radio broadcasting platforms.[47] In August 2015, BCE sold its remaining 15% stake in the Globe and Mail to Woodbridge.[48] Bell Media's subsidiaries:

  • Bell Media TV
  • Bell Media TV – Sports Specialty Services
  • Bell Media TV – Specialty Services (other than Sports)
  • Bell Media Radio
  • Bell Media Astral – Radio, TV, & Specialty Services

Other holdings edit

Below is partial list of the holdings of the BCE conglomerate.

Montreal Canadiens edit

In 2009, BCE partnered with the Molson family in acquiring the Montreal Canadiens Hockey Club and the Bell Centre. The $575 million purchase was termed "the richest deal in NHL history"; BCE's share was reported to be $40 million.[49]

Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment edit

In 2011, together with Rogers Communications and Kilmer Sports (holding company of Larry Tanenbaum), BCE acquired Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs professional hockey team. BCE's interest is held in partnership with Rogers Communications through the holding company 8047286 Canada Inc., 50% owned by Rogers and 50% by BCE holding company 7680147 Canada Inc., which is in turn 74.67% owned by BCE and 25.33% by BCE Master Trust Fund (investment fund of Bell's pension plan).[50]

Kilmer Sports and BCE also co-own the Toronto Argonauts, a team the companies purchased in 2015; BCE and Kilmer each own 50% of the team.[51]

Past holdings edit

BCE Development edit

BCE Development was founded as Daon Development by Vancouver-based developer Jack Poole in 1964. In the mid-1970s, Daon became known for expanding aggressively in the United States. The company first entered the American market in 1976 and nearly quadrupled its total assets to $1.67 billion in four years.[52] It borrowed heavily to finance deals for premium office space and condominium conversions. By 1981, the company had assets worth more than $2 billion. When interest rates soared, however, Daon was caught overextended, could not meet its debt payments, and was forced into a major restructuring with its bankers. In 1985, BCE acquired 68% of Daon from its creditors and changed its name to BCE Development Corporation in February 1986. In March 1986, it agreed to acquire US$1 billion of commercial real estate from the American subsidiary of the Oxford Development Group Ltd., more than doubling BCED's portfolio. BCE stated its goal was to convert from a land developer to a developer of prime commercial properties.[53]

In July 1990, BCE Inc. sold 50% ownership in BCE Development to Carena Developments Ltd. (controlled by the Toronto branch of the Bronfman family). BCED was renamed Brookfield Development Inc. (now Brookfield Asset Management) followed in 1994 by the remaining 50%.[54][55][56]

Montreal Trust edit

In March 1989, BCE bought a 64% stake in Montreal Trust from Power Financial for $547-million. The diversification was considered a "natural evolution" due to BCE's long-standing interest in financial services, its familiarity in selling services to the public, and its in-house money management operations. In 1993, BCE sold Montreal Trust to Scotiabank for about $290-million, taking a substantial loss.[57]

Nortel Networks edit

 
A Bell Nortel Millennium payphone, introduced in the 1990s. Nortel was a BCE subsidiary from 1983 to 2000.

When BCE was created in 1983, Northern Telecom was transferred from a subsidiary of CRTC-regulated Bell Canada to a non-regulated subsidiary of BCE. In 1998, with Nortel's acquisition of Bay Networks, the company's name was changed to Nortel Networks. As a consequence of the stock transaction used to purchase Bay Networks, BCE's holding was diluted to a minority stake. In 2000, BCE spun out Nortel, distributing its stock in Nortel to its shareholders. Nortel's share price collapsed with the dot-com crash of 2000 and combined with a mishandling of a subsequent accounting investigation, the company never fully recovered. It was liquidated in 2009.[58][59]

Teleglobe Inc. edit

In 1987, BCE purchased a 30% stake in Memotec Data Corporation for $196 million.[60] When Memotec purchased international telecommunications carrier Teleglobe Canada from the Canadian government in 1987, the company was renamed Teleglobe Inc. In March 2000, BCE announced the purchase of the Teleglobe shares it did not own for $9.65 billion.[61] In April 2002, BCE announced it was cutting off long-term funding of Teleglobe, would give up on the company, and take a charge of up to $8.5 billion.[62] In 2005, Teleglobe was sold to the Tata Group and is now known as VSNL International Canada. In September 2002, it sold its voice and data business for $197 million.[63]

Telesat Canada edit

In 1970, Bell Canada acquired a minority interest in satellite telecommunications carrier Telesat Canada. In 1998, BCE raised its stake to 100% at a cost of $158 million for the 42% of shares it did not already own.[64] In December 2006, BCE announced the sale of Telesat to Loral Space & Communications and the Public Sector Pension Investment Board for CAD$3.28 billion.

TransCanada Pipelines edit

In 1983, BCE acquired a controlling 42% stake in TransCanada PipeLines Limited (TCPL). In 1990, it announced its departure from the energy sector and sold its stake in TCPL for $1.1 billion.[65]

Corporate governance edit

BCE Inc.'s ISS Governance QualityScore as of December 3, 2019 is 2. The pillar scores are Audit: 1; Board: 3; Shareholder Rights: 3; Compensation: 3.

Corporate governance scores are provided to Yahoo! Finance by Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS). Scores denote a decile rank relative to index or region. A decile score of 1 denotes the lowest governance risk, while a score of 10 denotes the highest governance risk.[66]

Board of directors edit

As of March 2020, the current board of directors[67] are: Barry K. Allen, Mirko Bibic, Sophie Brochu, Robert E. Brown, David F. Denison, Robert P. Dexter, Ian Greenberg, Katherine Lee, Monique F. Leroux, Calin Rovinescu, Karen Sheriff, Robert C. Simmonds, and Paul R. Weiss.

Since inception, BCE has had five CEOs:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Contact Us." Contact Us | BCE Inc. Accessed February 25, 2021. https://www.bce.ca/contact-us.
  2. ^ "BCE Inc. Corporate Structure" (PDF). CRTC. 2019-10-04. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  3. ^ "BCE Inc. Corporate headquarters". bce.ca. Retrieved 2020-06-17.
  4. ^ FP500: 2014. Retrieved 2016-03-06 18 June 2014
  5. ^ Investor 500 2015: Canada's Biggest 15 companies by market cap, Canadian Business, June 16, 2015 March 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  6. ^ "Bell Canada Enterprises Inc | The Canadian Encyclopedia". thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  7. ^ chcom (2020-08-31). "BCE Inc". CompaniesHistory.com - The largest companies and brands in the world. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  8. ^ Bell Canada Enterprises, The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  9. ^ Bell Canada Enterprises Inc. has become the new parent..., UPI, April 29, 1983. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  10. ^ Macklem, Katherine (2002-05-06). . Maclean's Magazine. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
  11. ^ Lewis, Mark (2002-04-25). "BCE Backs Away From The Full Monty". Forbes.
  12. ^ (Press release). BCE, Inc. 2002-06-28. Archived from the original on 2007-09-21. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
  13. ^ "Bell Canada cuts 471 Ontario jobs | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
  14. ^ "Bell Canada to convert to income trust | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
  15. ^ BCE to be wound down, Bell Canada to convert to income trust 2008-06-17 at the Wayback Machine, BCE press release, October 11, 2006
  16. ^ BCE dies Bell lives as trust, The Globe and Mail, Oct. 12, 2006. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  17. ^ BCE drops its income-trust plan, Montreal Gazette, December 13, 2011. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  18. ^ "Bell announces 2007 business outlook — Improving revenue and EBITDA growth in 2007 guidance" (Press release). BCE, Inc. 2006-12-12. from the original on 27 January 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  19. ^ "United States SEC filing, June 12, 2007, Form 6-K". Securities and Exchange Commission. 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  20. ^ "bce-boosts-capital-spending-by-up-to-1-2b-plans-to-double-5g-coverage". 4 February 2021.
  21. ^ . Reuters. 2002-06-27. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
  22. ^ . CanWest News service. 2007-06-30. Archived from the original on 2007-12-06. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  23. ^ a b Sorkin, Andrew Ross; de la Merced, Michael J. (2008-05-19). "Banks' Terms Imperil Deal to Buy Out Bell Canada". The New York Times.
  24. ^ . Toronto Star. 2007-09-22. Archived from the original on 2007-12-01. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  25. ^ CBC News (2008-03-07). "Quebec court OK's BCE takeover, dismisses bondholders' complaints". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. from the original on 8 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  26. ^ Austen, Ian (2008-05-22). "Bell Canada Takeover Is Blocked". The New York Times.
  27. ^ Beltrame, Julian (2008-06-20). "Supreme Court approves BCE deal". The Canadian Press. Archived from the original on October 4, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  28. ^ "CRTC approves BCE purchase with conditions". CNW Group. 2008-03-27. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
  29. ^ (Press release). BCE, Inc. 2008-07-04. Archived from the original on 2008-08-01. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  30. ^ (Press release). BCE. 2008-07-11. Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  31. ^ CBC News (2008-12-11). "BCE takeover deal dead as fight looms over $1.2B breakup fee". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  32. ^ (Press release). BCE, Inc. 2008-11-26. Archived from the original on 2009-01-29. Retrieved 2008-12-03.
  33. ^ Marlow, Iain (2010-09-10). "Bell's Big Bet". Toronto: The Globe and Mail. from the original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-11.
  34. ^ McNish, Jacquie; Paul Waldie (2010-09-11). "Olympic moment turned Bell CEO into champion for mobile media". Toronto: The Globe and Mail. from the original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-11.
  35. ^ Marlow, Iain (2010-09-10). "BCE-CTV deal remakes media landscape". Toronto: The Globe and Mail. from the original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-11.
  36. ^ DeCloet, Derek (2010-09-10). "The new convergence: A lot like the old version but much, much cheaper". Toronto: The Globe and Mail. from the original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-11.
  37. ^ Canadian Press (2011-03-07). "CRTC approves BCE's purchase of CTVglobemedia". CTV.ca. from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-05-23.
  38. ^ Jackson, Emily (March 17, 2017). "Bell MTS deal closes, kicking off $1-billion investment that brings 4G to Churchill, Manitoba". The Financial Post. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  39. ^ BCE Inc. "BCE INC. 2015 ANNUAL REPORT" (PDF). BCE Inc. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  40. ^ CRTC Ownership structure 2015. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  41. ^ "Virgin Mobile rebranded to Virgin Plus | IT World Canada News". www.itworldcanada.com. 2021-07-19. Retrieved 2021-11-30.
  42. ^ "About us". Bell Media. Retrieved 2021-11-30.
  43. ^ "Bell launches CraveTV streaming service". CBC News. from the original on 2014-12-03.
  44. ^ https://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/bell-rogers-now-official-owners-of-mlse/article4493958/The Canadian Press (2011-12-09). "Bell to keep Canadiens stake". CBC.ca. Retrieved 2011-12-09.
  45. ^ BCE to buy CTV for $1.3B, CBC.ca, September 10, 2010. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  46. ^ BCE sells most of CTV and the Globe, National Post, December 3, 2011. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  47. ^ Bell Canada parent BCE buys CTV Inc. for $1.3B, CTV.ca, September 10, 2010. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  48. ^ Thomson family's Woodbridge buys full control of Globe and Mail, Reuters Canada, August 14, 2015. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  49. ^ Oh Canadiens: Inside The Richest Deal In NHL History, Forbes Magazine, 12/02/2010. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  50. ^ BCE Inc. (December 9, 2011). "Bell acquires ownership position in Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment – MLSE". Retrieved March 6, 2016.
  51. ^ "Leading the way in communications" (PDF). BCE Inc. 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-30.
  52. ^ Bell Canada to Acquire Daon Development Co. : Seeks Controlling Interest in Firm Whose Lightning Rise Ended With the Recession, LA Times, February 3, 1985. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  53. ^ Chairman rebuilding former Daon Corp., NY Times, March 14, 1986. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  54. ^ BCE Development Changes Its Name, Chicago Tribune, July 3, 1990. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  55. ^ Brookfield Properties Corporation, Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  56. ^ Brookfield Office Properties history 2011-11-07 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  57. ^ Rogers bank plans: Lessons from BCE, Financial Post, September 7, 2011. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  58. ^ Nortel – Collapse of a giant, Canadian Business, January 14, 2009 March 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  59. ^ Lessons from Nortel: Acquisitions spree, bad management calls led to tech giant's fall, study says, Financial Post, March 17, 2014. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  60. ^ Babe, Robert E. Telecommunications in Canada: Technology, Industry, and Government. University of Toronto Press, 1990. Page 30. ISBN 0802067387. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  61. ^ BCE goes International with Teleglobe, IT Canada, March 9, 2000. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  62. ^ BCE sells last of Teleglobe, Light Reading, 1/2/2003. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  63. ^ Teleglobe sells voice and data business, CBC, September 19, 2002. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  64. ^ Canada's BCE sells stake in British Firm, Journal of Commerce, May 13, 1998. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  65. ^ BCE Inc. – Company Profile, Reference for Business. Retrieved 2016-03-06
  66. ^ "BCE, Inc. (BCE) Company Profile & Facts – Yahoo Finance". finance.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  67. ^ "Board Members | BCE Inc". www.bce.ca. Retrieved 2020-03-26.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Business data for BCE Inc.:
    • Bloomberg
    • Google
    • Reuters
    • Yahoo!

this, article, about, parent, holding, company, bell, telecommunications, company, bell, canada, media, company, bell, media, mobile, cellular, bell, mobility, abbreviation, full, name, bell, canada, enterprises, publicly, traded, canadian, holding, company, b. This article is about the parent holding company Bell Inc For the telecommunications company see Bell Canada For the media company see Bell Media For mobile cellular see Bell Mobility BCE Inc an abbreviation of its full name Bell Canada Enterprises Inc is a publicly traded Canadian holding company for Bell Canada which includes telecommunications providers and various mass media assets under its subsidiary Bell Media Inc 2 Founded through a corporate reorganization in 1983 when Bell Canada Northern Telecom and other related companies all became subsidiaries of Bell Canada Enterprises Inc it is one of Canada s largest corporations The company is headquartered at 1 Carrefour Alexander Graham Bell 3 in the Verdun borough of Montreal Quebec Canada Bell Canada Enterprises Inc Trade nameBCE Inc Company typePublicTraded asTSX BCENYSE BCES amp P TSX 60 componentIndustryTelecommunicationsMass mediaFounded1983 41 years ago 1983 HeadquartersVerdun Quebec Canada 1 Key peopleMirko Bibic president amp CEO Glen LeBlanc CFO amp vice chair Atlantic Canada ProductsFixed line and mobile telephonyInternet servicesDigital televisionRadio broadcastingPrintRevenueCA 23 96 billion FY19 Operating incomeCA 7 96 billion FY19 Net incomeCA 3 25 billion FY19 Total assetsCA 60 15 billion FY19 Number of employees52 100 2019 SubsidiariesBell CanadaBell MediaBell Technical SolutionsMaple Leaf Sports amp Entertainment 37 5 Bell MobilityBell AliantVirgin PlusBell InternetBell Satellite TVBell Fibe TVFibeBell MTSLucky MobileThe SourceGlentel Inc 50 NorthwestelWebsitebce ca BCE Inc is a component of the S amp P TSX 60 and is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange and the American based New York Stock Exchange It was ranked as Canada s 17th largest corporation by revenue as of June 2014 4 and as the ninth largest by capitalization as of June 2015 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Diversification and expansion 1 2 Refocus on core business 1 3 Proposed takeover 1 4 Expanding again into mass media 2 Major subsidiaries 2 1 Bell Canada 2 2 Bell Media 3 Other holdings 3 1 Montreal Canadiens 3 2 Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment 4 Past holdings 4 1 BCE Development 4 2 Montreal Trust 4 3 Nortel Networks 4 4 Teleglobe Inc 4 5 Telesat Canada 4 6 TransCanada Pipelines 5 Corporate governance 5 1 Board of directors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Logo used by the Bell Telephone Company of Canada from 1902 to 1922 The Bell Telephone Company of Canada Ltd was created by an act of Parliament on 29 April 1880 6 Later known as Bell Canada its charter granted it the right to construct telephone lines alongside all public rights of way in Canada Under a licensing agreement with the US based American Bell Telephone Company Bell also manufactured telephones and telephone equipment an activity that would be spun off in a separate company that later became Northern Telecom and then Nortel Networks In 1983 all of the Bell Canada group of companies also known as the Bell Group were placed under a new holding company Bell Canada Enterprises Inc BCE 7 This corporate reorganization resulted in Bell Canada and its subsidiaries including Northern Telecom later Nortel Networks and over 80 others becoming subsidiaries of the new holding company BCE Under the new parent each company was owned directly by BCE which had the benefit of freeing the manufacturing company Nortel and other holdings from the heavily regulated telephone company Bell Canada Under a variety of leaders BCE has embarked on a series of diversifications consolidations and corporate strategies 8 In 1988 Bell Canada Enterprises was shortened to BCE Inc Diversification and expansion edit In 1983 A Jean de Grandpre chairman of Bell Canada was appointed as the first chairman and chief executive officer CEO of BCE 9 The company soon embarked on a major diversification into property development the energy sector financial services and other sectors Within a few years it became the first Canadian company to report CAD 1 billion in profits When Jean Monty assumed the job of CEO in 1998 he pursued a convergence strategy attempting to combine both content creation and distribution within BCE and to take greater advantage of the emerging Internet market BCE s acquisition in 2000 and subsequent financing of overseas carrier Teleglobe cost billions of dollars BCE sold Teleglobe two years later Jean Monty resigned and was succeeded by Michael Sabia as CEO 10 11 Refocus on core business edit Michael Sabia refocused BCE on its core telecommunications business prompting BCE to buy back the 20 share in Bell Canada that it had sold in 1999 to Ameritech later acquired by SBC Corporation 12 BCE also spun off operating units that it did not consider to be core to its business including Emergis in 2004 and Bell Globemedia and Telesat Canada in 2006 On February 1 2006 stating the need to remain competitive Bell Canada announced job cuts of 3 000 to 4 000 employees by the end of 2006 13 On April 28 BCE announced that CEO Michael Sabia was taking a 455 pay increase his salary being raised from C 1 21 million to 6 71 million The pay included a 1 25 million salary a 2 2 million bonus that Sabia converted to deferred share units a long term incentive payout of 3 million and other compensation the filing shows Bell Canada also posted record revenue increases for the previous fiscal year citation needed Under pressure from investors on October 11 2006 BCE announced it would be wound down with its remaining assets converted to an income trust so its income could be distributed directly to shareholders through dividends avoiding corporate taxes 14 The new entity was planned to be named Bell Canada Income Fund As part of this restructuring Bell Aliant offered to take Bell Nordiq private while remaining separate from the new Bell trust 15 Due to announced changes in taxation law by the Canadian federal government on December 12 2006 BCE announced it would not proceed with its planned conversion to an income trust 16 17 It then started planning a restructuring that would have eliminated the BCE holding company 18 19 but this was put on hold when the company began attracting takeover bids In February 2021 and in line with the growing importance of 5G wireless networks BCE announces the launch of the largest investment program in its history to double the proportion of Canadians covered 20 Proposed takeover edit Due to its stagnant share price starting in April 2007 BCE was courted for acquisition by pension funds and private equity groups including a consortium led by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board with Kohlberg Kravis Roberts as one of the participants a consortium led by the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan OTPP and a consortium that included Cerberus Capital Management 21 On June 30 2007 BCE accepted a bid of 42 75 per share in cash for a total valuation of 51 7 billion from the group led by the OTPP and including Providence Equity Partners Madison Dearborn Partners Merrill Lynch Global Private Equity and Toronto Dominion Bank The proposed deal would have been the largest acquisition in Canadian history and the largest leveraged buyout ever 22 23 The deal was approved by BCE shareholders 24 Quebec Superior Court 25 whose ruling was overturned by the Quebec Court of Appeal 26 but was later upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada 27 and the CRTC subject to certain conditions for its corporate governance structure to ensure that Bell remained under Canadian control 28 See BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders for further information Due to the tightening of the credit market caused by the subprime mortgage crisis the investment banks financing the deal led by Citigroup Deutsche Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland started negotiations on May 16 2008 to revise the terms of their loans with greater interest rates and greater restrictions to protect themselves 23 On July 4 2008 BCE announced that a final agreement had been reached on the terms of the purchase 29 with all financing in place and Michael Sabia left BCE with George Cope assuming the position of CEO on July 11 30 On November 26 2008 BCE announced that KPMG had informed BCE that it would not be able to issue a statement on the solvency of the company after its privatization one of the required conditions of the buyout As a result the purchase was cancelled 31 32 Expanding again into mass media edit nbsp A Bell Media CTV antenna in Ottawa 2010 BCE Inc gained full control of CTVglobemedia in 2010 With Shaw Communications purchasing the Global Television Network Videotron launching its wireless telephone network with video content as a key selling point 33 and the enormous popularity of wireless and Internet video and other media streams at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics 34 Bell once again sought to bring a content provider into its portfolio In September 2010 Bell announced a deal to reacquire full control of the broadcasting properties owned by CTVglobemedia including the CTV Television Network Bell also obtained a 15 interest in The Globe and Mail CTVglobemedia s other major asset with the remaining 85 owned by the Thomson family 35 Through this acquisition Bell responded to an increasing trend away from traditional cable and satellite delivery channels and towards new distribution methods over the Internet and wireless networks 36 The CRTC approved the transaction in March 2011 37 In 2016 BCE announced that it had entered an agreement to acquire Manitoba Telecom Services MTS in a transaction worth 3 9 billion The deal was approved by both companies shareholders and boards of directors and closed in March 2017 after the Competition Bureau and other agencies approved of the acquisition 38 Major subsidiaries editAs of 2016 BCE Inc has three primary divisions Bell Canada Bell Mobility and Bell Media comprising over 80 of BCE s revenue 39 Bell Aliant was a subsidiary company formed in 1999 from the merger of the four BCE controlled telephone companies serving Canada s Atlantic provinces In 2016 the operations of Bell Aliant were consolidated into those of Bell Canada 40 Its Bell MTS Inc subsidiary owns 100 of its Bell Canada division which includes Bell Aliant Bell Mobility Bell Satellite TV Bell Media Bell Fibe TV Virgin Mobile Canada and Lucky Mobile Bell s flanker wireless brand Virgin Mobile was officially rebranded to Virgin Plus on July 19 2021 to reflect the brand s evolution beyond just wireless offerings which now includes Virgin Plus Internet as well as Virgin Plus TV 41 The Bell Media assets include three Canadian conventional television networks CTV CTV 2 and Noovo along with dozens of specialty television channels including BNN Bloomberg CTV Comedy Channel CTV News Channel CTV Drama Channel CTV Sci Fi Channel MTV Canada MTV2 Canada Much E TSN RDS and 109 licensed radio stations in 58 markets across the country all part of the iHeartRadio brand and streaming service 42 In 2014 Bell launched their CraveTV streaming service which offers the latest originals from Crave HBO HBO Max and Showtime exclusive access to the entire HBO library the biggest Hollywood blockbusters and the best French language content in Canada 43 BCE also owns 18 of the Montreal Canadiens ice hockey club and together with BCE s pension plan a 37 5 interest in Maple Leaf Sports amp Entertainment owner of several Toronto sports franchises 44 Bell Canada edit Main article Bell Canada nbsp Bell Canada headquarters in Montreal The telecommunications company is a subsidiary of BCE Inc Bell Canada formed the primary historic core of the company in central Atlantic and northern Canada Bell Aliant Distribution Ontario Quebec Atlantic Bell Canada Cablevision du Nord de Quebec Inc Bell MTS Bell Satellite TV Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership Bell Media edit Main article Bell Media nbsp Bell Media headquarters at 299 Queen Street West in Toronto The company is BCE s mass media subsidiary Bell Media is the BCE broadcast and media subsidiary In 2000 BCE bought the CTV Television Network for 2 3 billion The company combined CTV with its holdings in The Globe and Mail newspaper to form Bell Globemedia with BCE owning 70 and Thomson Newspapers and Woodbridge Co Ltd the remainder In 2005 BCE sold its controlling interest in Bell Globemedia for 183 million to Woodbridge Torstar and the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan with BCE retaining a 20 stake 45 46 The company was subsequently renamed CTVglobemedia In 2007 it acquired most assets of CHUM Limited In 2010 BCE bought out the other owners acquiring CTV s specialty television digital media conventional TV and radio broadcasting platforms 47 In August 2015 BCE sold its remaining 15 stake in the Globe and Mail to Woodbridge 48 Bell Media s subsidiaries Bell Media TV Bell Media TV Sports Specialty Services Bell Media TV Specialty Services other than Sports Bell Media Radio Bell Media Astral Radio TV amp Specialty ServicesOther holdings editBelow is partial list of the holdings of the BCE conglomerate Montreal Canadiens edit In 2009 BCE partnered with the Molson family in acquiring the Montreal Canadiens Hockey Club and the Bell Centre The 575 million purchase was termed the richest deal in NHL history BCE s share was reported to be 40 million 49 Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment edit In 2011 together with Rogers Communications and Kilmer Sports holding company of Larry Tanenbaum BCE acquired Maple Leaf Sports amp Entertainment owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs professional hockey team BCE s interest is held in partnership with Rogers Communications through the holding company 8047286 Canada Inc 50 owned by Rogers and 50 by BCE holding company 7680147 Canada Inc which is in turn 74 67 owned by BCE and 25 33 by BCE Master Trust Fund investment fund of Bell s pension plan 50 Kilmer Sports and BCE also co own the Toronto Argonauts a team the companies purchased in 2015 BCE and Kilmer each own 50 of the team 51 Past holdings editBCE Development edit BCE Development was founded as Daon Development by Vancouver based developer Jack Poole in 1964 In the mid 1970s Daon became known for expanding aggressively in the United States The company first entered the American market in 1976 and nearly quadrupled its total assets to 1 67 billion in four years 52 It borrowed heavily to finance deals for premium office space and condominium conversions By 1981 the company had assets worth more than 2 billion When interest rates soared however Daon was caught overextended could not meet its debt payments and was forced into a major restructuring with its bankers In 1985 BCE acquired 68 of Daon from its creditors and changed its name to BCE Development Corporation in February 1986 In March 1986 it agreed to acquire US 1 billion of commercial real estate from the American subsidiary of the Oxford Development Group Ltd more than doubling BCED s portfolio BCE stated its goal was to convert from a land developer to a developer of prime commercial properties 53 In July 1990 BCE Inc sold 50 ownership in BCE Development to Carena Developments Ltd controlled by the Toronto branch of the Bronfman family BCED was renamed Brookfield Development Inc now Brookfield Asset Management followed in 1994 by the remaining 50 54 55 56 Montreal Trust edit In March 1989 BCE bought a 64 stake in Montreal Trust from Power Financial for 547 million The diversification was considered a natural evolution due to BCE s long standing interest in financial services its familiarity in selling services to the public and its in house money management operations In 1993 BCE sold Montreal Trust to Scotiabank for about 290 million taking a substantial loss 57 Nortel Networks edit nbsp A Bell Nortel Millennium payphone introduced in the 1990s Nortel was a BCE subsidiary from 1983 to 2000 When BCE was created in 1983 Northern Telecom was transferred from a subsidiary of CRTC regulated Bell Canada to a non regulated subsidiary of BCE In 1998 with Nortel s acquisition of Bay Networks the company s name was changed to Nortel Networks As a consequence of the stock transaction used to purchase Bay Networks BCE s holding was diluted to a minority stake In 2000 BCE spun out Nortel distributing its stock in Nortel to its shareholders Nortel s share price collapsed with the dot com crash of 2000 and combined with a mishandling of a subsequent accounting investigation the company never fully recovered It was liquidated in 2009 58 59 Teleglobe Inc edit In 1987 BCE purchased a 30 stake in Memotec Data Corporation for 196 million 60 When Memotec purchased international telecommunications carrier Teleglobe Canada from the Canadian government in 1987 the company was renamed Teleglobe Inc In March 2000 BCE announced the purchase of the Teleglobe shares it did not own for 9 65 billion 61 In April 2002 BCE announced it was cutting off long term funding of Teleglobe would give up on the company and take a charge of up to 8 5 billion 62 In 2005 Teleglobe was sold to the Tata Group and is now known as VSNL International Canada In September 2002 it sold its voice and data business for 197 million 63 Telesat Canada edit In 1970 Bell Canada acquired a minority interest in satellite telecommunications carrier Telesat Canada In 1998 BCE raised its stake to 100 at a cost of 158 million for the 42 of shares it did not already own 64 In December 2006 BCE announced the sale of Telesat to Loral Space amp Communications and the Public Sector Pension Investment Board for CAD 3 28 billion TransCanada Pipelines edit In 1983 BCE acquired a controlling 42 stake in TransCanada PipeLines Limited TCPL In 1990 it announced its departure from the energy sector and sold its stake in TCPL for 1 1 billion 65 Corporate governance editBCE Inc s ISS Governance QualityScore as of December 3 2019 is 2 The pillar scores are Audit 1 Board 3 Shareholder Rights 3 Compensation 3 Corporate governance scores are provided to Yahoo Finance by Institutional Shareholder Services ISS Scores denote a decile rank relative to index or region A decile score of 1 denotes the lowest governance risk while a score of 10 denotes the highest governance risk 66 Board of directors edit As of March 2020 the current board of directors 67 are Barry K Allen Mirko Bibic Sophie Brochu Robert E Brown David F Denison Robert P Dexter Ian Greenberg Katherine Lee Monique F Leroux Calin Rovinescu Karen Sheriff Robert C Simmonds and Paul R Weiss Since inception BCE has had five CEOs A Jean de Grandpre 1983 1988 Jean Monty 1988 2002 Michael Sabia 2002 2008 George A Cope 2008 2020 Mirko Bibic CurrentSee also editCommunications in Canada Tier 1 network List of mobile network operators List of telephone operating companies Triple play telecommunications References edit Contact Us Contact Us BCE Inc Accessed February 25 2021 https www bce ca contact us BCE Inc Corporate Structure PDF CRTC 2019 10 04 Retrieved 2020 05 08 BCE Inc Corporate headquarters bce ca Retrieved 2020 06 17 FP500 2014 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Archived 18 June 2014 Investor 500 2015 Canada s Biggest 15 companies by market cap Canadian Business June 16 2015 Archived March 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2016 03 06 Bell Canada Enterprises Inc The Canadian Encyclopedia thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 2023 03 29 chcom 2020 08 31 BCE Inc CompaniesHistory com The largest companies and brands in the world Retrieved 2023 03 29 Bell Canada Enterprises The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2016 03 06 Bell Canada Enterprises Inc has become the new parent UPI April 29 1983 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Macklem Katherine 2002 05 06 Monty quits as BCE CEO Maclean s Magazine Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved 2007 06 29 Lewis Mark 2002 04 25 BCE Backs Away From The Full Monty Forbes BCE to Own 100 per cent of Bell Canada Press release BCE Inc 2002 06 28 Archived from the original on 2007 09 21 Retrieved 2007 06 29 Bell Canada cuts 471 Ontario jobs CBC News CBC Retrieved 2018 09 29 Bell Canada to convert to income trust CBC News CBC Retrieved 2018 09 29 BCE to be wound down Bell Canada to convert to income trust Archived 2008 06 17 at the Wayback Machine BCE press release October 11 2006 BCE dies Bell lives as trust The Globe and Mail Oct 12 2006 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE drops its income trust plan Montreal Gazette December 13 2011 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Bell announces 2007 business outlook Improving revenue and EBITDA growth in 2007 guidance Press release BCE Inc 2006 12 12 Archived from the original on 27 January 2007 Retrieved 2007 01 11 United States SEC filing June 12 2007 Form 6 K Securities and Exchange Commission 2007 06 12 Retrieved 2007 06 30 bce boosts capital spending by up to 1 2b plans to double 5g coverage 4 February 2021 Telus s exit likely to pull down price of BCE bids Reuters 2002 06 27 Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 06 29 Teachers win BCE bid CanWest News service 2007 06 30 Archived from the original on 2007 12 06 Retrieved 2007 06 30 a b Sorkin Andrew Ross de la Merced Michael J 2008 05 19 Banks Terms Imperil Deal to Buy Out Bell Canada The New York Times BCE holders approve giant buyout Toronto Star 2007 09 22 Archived from the original on 2007 12 01 Retrieved 2007 10 01 CBC News 2008 03 07 Quebec court OK s BCE takeover dismisses bondholders complaints Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 8 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 06 20 Austen Ian 2008 05 22 Bell Canada Takeover Is Blocked The New York Times Beltrame Julian 2008 06 20 Supreme Court approves BCE deal The Canadian Press Archived from the original on October 4 2008 Retrieved 2008 06 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link CRTC approves BCE purchase with conditions CNW Group 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2008 04 03 BCE and Purchaser Enter Into Final Agreement Financing and Credit Agreements Signed Press release BCE Inc 2008 07 04 Archived from the original on 2008 08 01 Retrieved 2008 08 07 George Cope appointed to the boards of directors and as CEO of BCE Inc and Bell Canada Press release BCE 2008 07 11 Archived from the original on 21 July 2008 Retrieved 2008 07 11 CBC News 2008 12 11 BCE takeover deal dead as fight looms over 1 2B breakup fee Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 2009 01 03 BCE statement regarding privatization transaction Press release BCE Inc 2008 11 26 Archived from the original on 2009 01 29 Retrieved 2008 12 03 Marlow Iain 2010 09 10 Bell s Big Bet Toronto The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 13 September 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 11 McNish Jacquie Paul Waldie 2010 09 11 Olympic moment turned Bell CEO into champion for mobile media Toronto The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 13 September 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 11 Marlow Iain 2010 09 10 BCE CTV deal remakes media landscape Toronto The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 13 September 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 11 DeCloet Derek 2010 09 10 The new convergence A lot like the old version but much much cheaper Toronto The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 13 September 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 11 Canadian Press 2011 03 07 CRTC approves BCE s purchase of CTVglobemedia CTV ca Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 2011 05 23 Jackson Emily March 17 2017 Bell MTS deal closes kicking off 1 billion investment that brings 4G to Churchill Manitoba The Financial Post Retrieved February 28 2021 BCE Inc BCE INC 2015 ANNUAL REPORT PDF BCE Inc Retrieved 2016 03 21 CRTC Ownership structure 2015 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Virgin Mobile rebranded to Virgin Plus IT World Canada News www itworldcanada com 2021 07 19 Retrieved 2021 11 30 About us Bell Media Retrieved 2021 11 30 Bell launches CraveTV streaming service CBC News Archived from the original on 2014 12 03 https www theglobeandmail com report on business bell rogers now official owners of mlse article4493958 The Canadian Press 2011 12 09 Bell to keep Canadiens stake CBC ca Retrieved 2011 12 09 BCE to buy CTV for 1 3B CBC ca September 10 2010 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE sells most of CTV and the Globe National Post December 3 2011 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Bell Canada parent BCE buys CTV Inc for 1 3B CTV ca September 10 2010 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Thomson family s Woodbridge buys full control of Globe and Mail Reuters Canada August 14 2015 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Oh Canadiens Inside The Richest Deal In NHL History Forbes Magazine 12 02 2010 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE Inc December 9 2011 Bell acquires ownership position in Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment MLSE Retrieved March 6 2016 Leading the way in communications PDF BCE Inc 2016 Retrieved 2016 03 30 Bell Canada to Acquire Daon Development Co Seeks Controlling Interest in Firm Whose Lightning Rise Ended With the Recession LA Times February 3 1985 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Chairman rebuilding former Daon Corp NY Times March 14 1986 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE Development Changes Its Name Chicago Tribune July 3 1990 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Brookfield Properties Corporation Encyclopedia com Retrieved 2016 03 06 Brookfield Office Properties history Archived 2011 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2016 03 06 Rogers bank plans Lessons from BCE Financial Post September 7 2011 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Nortel Collapse of a giant Canadian Business January 14 2009 Archived March 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2016 03 06 Lessons from Nortel Acquisitions spree bad management calls led to tech giant s fall study says Financial Post March 17 2014 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Babe Robert E Telecommunications in Canada Technology Industry and Government University of Toronto Press 1990 Page 30 ISBN 0802067387 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE goes International with Teleglobe IT Canada March 9 2000 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE sells last of Teleglobe Light Reading 1 2 2003 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Teleglobe sells voice and data business CBC September 19 2002 Retrieved 2016 03 06 Canada s BCE sells stake in British Firm Journal of Commerce May 13 1998 Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE Inc Company Profile Reference for Business Retrieved 2016 03 06 BCE Inc BCE Company Profile amp Facts Yahoo Finance finance yahoo com Retrieved 2020 03 26 Board Members BCE Inc www bce ca Retrieved 2020 03 26 External links editOfficial website Business data for BCE Inc BloombergGoogleReutersYahoo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BCE Inc amp oldid 1219190915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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