Belden (NYSE: BDC) has agreed to acquire Ruckus Networks from Vistance Networks (NASDAQ: VISN) for $1.846 billion in cash. It is the latest ownership change for a Wi-Fi and enterprise switching vendor that has changed hands more times in the past decade than most networking vendors change their management platforms.
Founded in 2004 as Ruckus Wireless, the company went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2012 before being taken private when Brocade acquired it for approximately $1.5 billion in 2016. Arris bought it from Brocade the following year, picking up Brocade’s ICX switch business along with it. CommScope acquired Arris in 2019. In January 2026, CommScope closed the sale of its Cable and Connectivity Solutions segment to Amphenol and rebranded the remaining business as Vistance Networks, with Ruckus as an operating unit. Now, less than four months later, Ruckus is once again on the move.
“Together, Belden and Ruckus will offer something no single competitor can match, a complete active and passive networking solution spanning the industrial edge to the enterprise campus,” Belden CEO Ashish Chand said during his company’s earnings call.
What Ruckus is, and why Vistance is selling
Ruckus serves more than 48,000 customers globally across hospitality, education, healthcare, warehousing and manufacturing. Its portfolio has three main components. The first is enterprise Wi-Fi, where the company has enterprise Wi-Fi 7 access points, with deployments in high-density, mission-critical environments. The second is enterprise switching, built on the ICX platform that traces its lineage to Foundry Networks, which Brocade acquired in 2008. That platform has been inherited by each successive owner and remains the foundation of today’s Ruckus switching line. The ICX platform was most recently expanded with a new Pro AV switch portfolio designed for AV-over-IP environments. The third is Ruckus One, a cloud platform for unified wired and wireless management.
For Vistance, the sale completes a portfolio exit that began with the sale of its Cable and Connectivity Solutions segment to Amphenol in January. Two businesses remained after that deal: Ruckus and Aurora Networks, which supplies DOCSIS 4.0 infrastructure to cable operators.
“After a detailed evaluation of our remaining businesses after the CCS transaction, it became clear that the remaining two businesses needed to be separated,” Vistance CEO Chuck Treadway said during his company’s earnings call. “Belden is a favorable buyer of the business for our customers and employees as they will continue to support the investment required to further grow Ruckus’ innovative products and services.”
Why Belden wants it and how it fits
Belden sells passive networking infrastructure including structured cabling, fiber and industrial connectivity products, along with OT wireless and industrial switching for automation environments. What it has not had is enterprise Wi-Fi or enterprise switching. “This is not an overlap story,” Chand said. “It is a completion story.”
During Belden’s earnings call, financial analysts pressed Chand on why this pairing works when CommScope, which previously owned Ruckus alongside a structured cabling business, could not produce similar results. Chand attributed the difference to market timing.
“What we’ve seen in the last three to five years is a lot more convergence,” he said. “And I think it’s accelerated significantly over the last, let’s say, 18 to 24 months because of the whole idea that customers want to go towards autonomy and they need converged networks for that.”
The move from Wi-Fi 6 to Wi-Fi 7 and eventually Wi-Fi 8 is part of that shift. As networks become more deterministic, AI-driven optimization becomes a practical necessity at scale rather than a feature.
“If you think about traditional Wi-Fi 6, which is more based on RF technology, as you get to more Wi-Fi 7, Wi-Fi 8, this has to become more deterministic and you need AI optimization really to make that happen,” Chand said. “Otherwise, it’s just too complex. So Ruckus is pretty advanced in terms of how they are working on that entire capability.”
On the software side, Belden runs the Horizon platform for OT network management. Ruckus One covers unified wired and wireless management on the IT side. Chand said the two are candidates for eventual consolidation. Horizon carries vertical-specific depth while Ruckus One is designed for broader horizontal management.
“I think there are positives and negatives that both will cancel each other out and become more powerful,” he said.
The opportunity ahead
Beyond the enterprise play, Belden sees Ruckus as an entry point into a longer-term shift in industrial networking. Most machine data in discrete manufacturing still travels over wireline. Chand said that is expected to move toward roughly a 50/50 split between wired and wireless within three to five years, with wireless potentially taking the majority beyond that.
“A lot of our discrete customers are planning for that change, and they need advice,” he said. “Right now, they struggle because they don’t actually have a company that they can go to for that comprehensive blueprint.”