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Global Crossing to Emerge From Chapter 11, Sources Say

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From Bloomberg News

Global Crossing Ltd., whose bankruptcy filing two years ago cost investors $40 billion, plans to emerge from Chapter 11 protection as early as this week, people familiar with the matter said.

Singapore Technologies Telemedia, which is controlled by Singapore’s government, will own a 61.5% stake in the company after paying $250 million. Creditors will own the rest. Global Crossing also will announce the written-down value of its main asset, a worldwide fiber-optic network spanning 100,000 miles, the people said.

Global Crossing, which is based in Hamilton, Bermuda, and run from Florham Park, N.J., will emerge nearly debt-free as a competitor to Qwest Communications International Inc. and Level 3 Communications Inc. in a market where the cost of using a fiber-optic line between New York and Los Angeles has plunged 88% since 2000.

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“The market is still very rough,” said Stephan Beckert, an analyst at Washington-based research firm TeleGeography. “People are still cutting prices.”

Global Crossing released financial results Monday that showed the company made a profit in 2002 after losing money the two years before that. The company has slashed half its workforce and is trying to sell more services.

Net income for 2002 was $635 million on revenue of $3.12 billion, the company said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Global Crossing lost $25.7 billion for 2000 and 2001 on sales of $7.16 billion.

Singapore Technologies overcame a final hurdle in its acquisition last week by agreeing to pay $200 million in cash in lieu of notes to holders of bank debt including billionaire Carl Icahn and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. The company is optimistic about completing the deal “very soon,” spokeswoman Melinda Tan said.

“Singapore Technologies acquired the asset at a very attractive price,” said To Chee Eng, a Gartner analyst in Singapore. “The next step is to build it into a viable business” by adding salespeople and services.

Global Crossing, founded in 1997 by Los Angeles billionaire Gary Winnick, amassed debt to build a network for sending data at speeds faster than with copper phone wires.

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Sales growth slumped as the market became saturated and the U.S. economy slowed, leading the company to file for Chapter 11 protection in January 2002 with $22.4 billion in listed assets and $12.4 billion in debt.

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