Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Honeywell Buys Space Hardware Maker Com Dev In $455 Million Deal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2015 11:22 AM
    TORONTO — American aerospace and manufacturing giant Honeywell is taking over Cambridge, Ont.,-based space hardware maker Com Dev International (TSX:CDV) in a $455-million deal that will see the Canadian company spin off its exactEarth subsidiary.
     
    Com Dev manufactures and sells devices such as transponders used in satellites and satellite ground stations, and their hardware is found on 950 spacecraft and 80 percent of all commercial communication satellites.
     
    ExactEarth is a joint venture with Hisdesat Servicios Estrategicos S.A. and provides satellite data services. The company and its subsidiary employ 1,250 people at facilities in Canada, China, India, the United Kingdom and the United States.
     
    In an announcment after markets closed on Thursday, the two companies said investors will receive $5.25 in cash per share as well as a small stake in the independent exactEarth, which will be worth an estimated $125 million on its own.
     
    Com Dev shares closed Thursday at $5.35, down six cents.
     
    Honeywell will fold Com Dev into its existing satellite and space hardware business. The deal will be put to a vote of Com Dev's shareholders scheduled for January.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Searchers Close To Pinpointing Lost Hikers On Mount Seymour

    Searchers Close To Pinpointing Lost Hikers On Mount Seymour
    Searchers believe they are close to pinpointing the location of a Richmond, B.C., couple who has spent the night lost on Mount Seymour, in North Vancouver.

    Searchers Close To Pinpointing Lost Hikers On Mount Seymour

    Review Of Missing Data Of Students Launched

    Review Of Missing Data Of Students Launched
    n Indo-Canadian minister has launched a review of the management of information after an un-encrypted backup hard drive containing personal information of nearly 3.4 million Canadian students was reported missing.

    Review Of Missing Data Of Students Launched

    Supreme Court Won't Hear Case Of Quebec Man Who Loves To Feed Squirrels

    Supreme Court Won't Hear Case Of Quebec Man Who Loves To Feed Squirrels
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court will not hear the case of a Montreal man with a passion for feeding squirrels and other wildlife.

    Supreme Court Won't Hear Case Of Quebec Man Who Loves To Feed Squirrels

    Canada's Mayors Call On Federal Parties To Make Housing A Campaign Issue

    The mayors of some of Canada's largest cities have called on federal parties to make commitments to affordable housing.

    Canada's Mayors Call On Federal Parties To Make Housing A Campaign Issue

    B.C. New Democrat Leader John Horgan Vows Partnership With Cities At Conference

    John Horgan spoke to hundreds of local politicians from across the province gathered at the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities conference.

    B.C. New Democrat Leader John Horgan Vows Partnership With Cities At Conference

    What Recession? Joe Oliver Says Canada Was Not In Downturn Earlier This Year

    Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the country was not in a recession in the first half of the year despite economic data to the contrary.

    What Recession? Joe Oliver Says Canada Was Not In Downturn Earlier This Year