PARIS โ€” Mobile satellite operator Inmarsat on Nov. 23 announced it is purchasing communications services provider Segovia Inc. of the United States for $110 million in cash in a transaction that will bolster London-based Inmarsatโ€™s position in U.S. government markets.

Herndon, Va.-based Segovia, which was founded in 2002, provides integrated communications services to the U.S. Department of Defense and other U.S. and allied government agencies through its terrestrial and satellite-based network.

The company, a customer of Inmarsatโ€™s L-band mobile satellite services, operates a network of very small aperture terminal (VSAT) satellite Earth stations for the Defense Department. Segovia leases capacity on more than a dozen commercial geostationary-orbiting satellites operating in Ku- and C-band to provide global reach for its government customers.

In its Nov. 23 announcement of the acquisition, Inmarsat said Segovia reported a net profit of $18 million on revenue of $67 million for 2008.

Inmarsat said the $110 million purchase price, which it will finance from existing cash reserves, may be increased depending on Segoviaโ€™s performance in the next three years. The acquisition is expected to close in early 2010. Segovia will be operated as an independent division of Bethesda, Md.-based mobile satellite services distributor Stratos Global Networks, which Inmarsat purchased earlier this year.

โ€œSegovia is ideally positioned to support the U.S. [Defense Departmentโ€™s] requirements to deploy secure networks rapidly using combinations of satellite and terrestrial facilities wherever in the world they are required,โ€ Inmarsat Chief Executive Andrew Sukawaty said in a Nov. 23 statement. โ€œWith Segoviaโ€™s secure global communications infrastructure and its highly qualified and security-cleared staff, we will further strengthen our relationships with key government customers across land, maritime and aeronautical environments, and bring enhanced services to the government sector generally.โ€

Peter B. de Selding was the Paris bureau chief for SpaceNews.