Telecom Italia approves KKR’s $20-B grid bid in blow for Vivendi
MILAN -Telecom Italia (TIM) on Sunday approved the 19 billion euro ($20 billion) sale of its fixed-line network to U.S. private equity firm KKR, becoming the first telecoms group in a major European country to part ways with its landline grid.
The deal, backed by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s conservative administration, involves an asset that Italy deems of national strategic importance as it works to bridge its digital divide with the rest of the European Union.
The sale is a key plank of TIM CEO Pietro Labriola’s plans to revive the debt-laden, junk-rated former phone monopoly, which can ill afford the investments its ageing grid needs.
The board started a review of KKR’s offer on Friday, approving it on Sunday, TIM said.
The sale’s 18.8 billion euro price tag, including debt, could reach 22 billion euros if certain conditions are met, TIM said.
Article continues after this advertisementThe earnout is mostly linked to a long-mooted combination of TIM’s grid with that of state-backed fiber optic rival Open Fiber, sources had previously said. Such a deal would reduce competitive pressure on prices.
Article continues after this advertisementThe deal, which TIM said should close in the summer of 2024, would allow the group to reduce its financial debt by around 14 billion euros.
Cash-burning TIM would also shed half of its 40,000 domestic staff and focus on its service operations.
“Two years of hard work … culminate into a historic decision: creating two companies with new growth prospect,” Labriola said in a statement.
To oversee an asset deemed of national strategic importance, Italy’s government has authorized the Treasury to spend up to 2.2 billion euros to take a 20% stake in the network alongside KKR, which is already a minority investor in the grid.
The Treasury already controls TIM’s second-largest investor, state lender CDP.
TIM said it would not put the board’s decision to a shareholder vote, in a setback for leading shareholder VivendI.
Vivendi, which owns 24 percent of TIM, has been seeking a higher price and questioned the sustainability of the business left behind. It said on Sunday it considered the board’s decision “unlawful”, adding it would use “any legal means at its disposal to challenge” it.
In Vivendi’s view, the sale required an extraordinary shareholder vote and clearance from an internal TIM board committee for related party transactions, given that the Treasury controls TIM investor CDP and is investing in the grid.
TIM on Sunday also dismissed as not in line with its strategy an alternative plan pitched in recent weeks by London-based investment firm Merlyn Advisors, which Vivendi had called on the board to assess.
“Merlyn … reserves the possibility of taking any steps that would bring the board to call … a shareholder meeting to decide whether the plan approved on Sunday is what shareholders want,” Merlyn said in a note.
($1 = 0.9321 euros)