Ericsson on Wednesday announced a 32 billion Swedish crown ($2.9 billion) impairment charge related to its acquisition last year of Vonage and said core profits fell in the third quarter as demand tumbled in North America. The Swedish telecom gear maker bought Vonage in a $6.2 billion deal. "The impairment is as consequence of the significant drop in the market capitalisation of Vonage's publicly traded peers, increased interest rates and overall slowdown in Vonage's core markets," it said in a statement. "The impairment charge represents 50 per cent of the total amount of goodwill and other intangible assets attributed to Vonage."

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Ericsson said a preliminary reading showed its operating profit before amortisation and restructuring and impairment charges fell 39 per cent in the third quarter to 4.7 billion crowns.

Group sales adjusted for comparable units and currency translation effects fell 10 per cent. Ericsson's biggest division Networks saw organic sales drop 16 per cent.

"Networks organic sales were down by 60 per cent in North America year-on-year, with operators reducing their capex spend and adjusting inventories," it said.

Ericsson's profits plunged also in the second quarter as a slowdown in consumer spending hit sales of telecommunications gear. In February, the group announced plans to cut 8,500 employees globally to reduce costs.

The group, which is scheduled to publish its full quarterly earnings report on October 17, said it expected an operating margin of 7.3 per cent before amortisation and restructuring charges, in line with previous guidance.

Ericsson is looking to tap Vonage's communication platform to help developers create applications using network information, user authentication, bandwidth, responsiveness, energy efficiency, security and reliability.