By Sam Schechner 

PARIS-- Nokia Corp. is close to buying French rival Alcatel-Lucent, in a deal aimed at creating a European telecommunications-equipment behemoth that could spur a new wave of consolidation.

The two companies said Tuesday that they are in advanced talks over a "full combination" of their businesses in which Nokia would offer a share exchange for control of Alcatel-Lucent. The deal--while not yet sealed--is expected be announced as early as this week, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Finnish-French tie-up would create a firm with more than 100,000 employees and nearly EUR26 billion ($27.7 billion) in revenue, rivaling Sweden's Ericsson, the market leader. The deal would also arm the two companies with more research firepower and a broader technological arsenal in their fight against China's Huawei Technologies Co., the No. 2 company whose fast expansion has rattled politicians in the U.S. and Europe.

"It's a big champion that could compete with Huawei and Chinese champions," said French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron after a meeting with the chief executives of both companies.

The talks come as revolutions in networking are disrupting a telecom-equipment business that has already suffered the whiplash of the Internet and brutal price wars when Huawei and Chinese firm ZTE Corp. burst onto the international scene with low-cost cellular antennae more than a decade ago.

This time around, industry executives expect a new set of communication technologies to more closely knit together many types of network gear, sometimes replacing specialized telecom equipment with software running on inexpensive computers.

That development could open traditional players to new competitors, but also give an edge to firms that already have a broad portfolios and deep client lists, like Huawei and Ericsson. Smaller Internet routing players like Juniper Networks Inc. could become acquisition targets.

"What you have is the convergence of networking technologies," said Pierre Ferragu, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. "If this deal works, we could see a new round of consolidation."

In the intervening years, Huawei has roughly tripled the revenue of its business selling gear to telecommunications firms, despite being essentially blocked out of the U.S. telecom-equipment market because of government concerns that the company has ties to the Chinese military--allegations Huawei denies.

Nokia had roughly 17% market share in wireless networks globally in 2014, behind 30% for Ericsson and 20% for Huawei, according to Infonetics, a market-research firm. Alcatel had a 10% share, and was surpassed last year by ZTE, which now has 11% globally, Infonetics said.

Huawei has directed particular effort at winning market share in Europe, undercutting homegrown firms like Alcatel-Lucent. It was the first, for instance, to make wireless transmitters that included older 2G and 3G signals along with the capacity to add 4G in the same box--helping it win contracts from telecommunications firms in France and other countries.

For France, a deal would end the independence of an industrial icon that helped develop the country's bullet trains, and was decades ago the second-largest telecom-equipment maker in the world, behind the old AT&T.

Successive French governments have sought to nurse domestic industrial champions capable of competing in the global arena, often stepping in to keep foreign buyers at bay. Earlier this month, the French government ordered partially state-owned telecoms operator Orange SA to find a European owner for its video streaming unit Dailymotion, even after it was in advanced talks with a Hong Kong investor. Days later, Orange said it had found an interested buyer in Vivendi SA, the French media conglomerate.

But France is increasingly straining to maintain French control over its roster of champions. In the past year, General Electric Co. has bought the energy assets of Alstom SA. Holcim Ltd. is in the process of buying French cement giant Lafarge SA.

Constrained by European Union rules limiting state aid and its own beleaguered finances, the French government has little leeway to block foreign bidders while supporting national companies--making transcontinental mergers an attractive alternative.

The possible French-Finnish tie-up would join two companies that are only recently emerging from woes that stemmed from a troubled wave of consolidation nearly a decade ago.

Nokia's telecommunications-equipment unit struggled for years in what was an awkward joint venture with Siemens AG, forcing a brutal round of staff cuts and restructuring to return to profit. Nokia bought Siemens out of the newly profitable company in 2013, after agreeing to sell its cellphone handset business to Microsoft Corp.

Alcatel-Lucent, meanwhile, has lurched through repeated restructuring plans and asset sales as it burned cash. Created in 2006 in the merger of France's Alcatel and the U.S.'s Lucent Technologies, a spinout from the old AT&T, the company suffered from trans-Atlantic management spats, and replaced its chief executive repeatedly. In 2015, it is on track to post positive free cash flow for the first time.

Those experiences for years chastened executives at both companies from embarking on a new round of deal making, according to people at the firms. One problem is that networking companies must maintain relationships with long-term clients, meaning that it is harder to discontinue duplicated products and technologies after a merger.

But cost-cutting at both firms has helped make them more complementary, rather than overlapping, in their technologies, analysts say. Alcatel-Lucent CEO Michel Combes has since taking over in 2013 been slimming down and refocusing the company under what he described as the "Shift" plan. Alcatel-Lucent has since sold its office-phone business, its U.S. government-equipment business and other assets, while cutting staffing.

For Nokia, a deal would be a way to gain market share in the competitive wireless business against Ericsson in the profitable U.S. market, where Alcatel-Lucent has historical roots and long-standing relationships with Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc. It would also add Alcatel-Lucent's fast-growing Internet routing business, which is one of the firm's profit engines that analysts are counting on for future growth. Nokia's equipment business has since its restructuring focused solely on wireless networking.

Alcatel-Lucent has also been planning a public offering of a minority stake in its submarine-networking division, which is a leader in laying telecommunications cables beneath oceans. It remains unclear if that IPO, slated for the second half of the year, will continue if a combination of Nokia and Alcatel is agreed. French officials have said the unit is a strategic asset for the country's intelligence services.

Shayndi Raice contributed to this article.

Write to Sam Schechner at sam.schechner@wsj.com

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