HELSINKI (Reuters) - Swedish telecom equipment maker Ericsson "We don't expect to see any hiccups. I think it will be closed very soon," chief technology office Hakan Eriksson told Reuters. The U.S. Department of Justice is still reviewing the deal, which raises Ericsson's market share in wireless network equipment in North America to about 50 percent. Canada decided in September against launching a review of the deal. On August 12, Ericsson had also said it expected the deal to close 'very soon.' Among the mobile network technologies, CDMA has had a strong position in the Americas and some countries in Asia while GSM is a dominant technology elsewhere. LTE is an emerging technology with potentially universal reach, but a more natural evolution for former GSM operators than for CDMA. Eriksson said taking over Nortel's strong position in the CDMA business would put the Swedish company in a good position when CDMA operators look for next-generation networks, most likely LTE. Also, as a mature technology, CDMA requires minimal R&D investments. Ericsson won one of the first major LTE deals around -- from Verizon "CDMA has still many years left, especially as a voice service," said Eriksson, who was on Thursday appointed also to lead Ericsson's operations in Silicon Valley. He will be the first group level executive based in the United States.














