Email

Carlos Slim in $9.6BN bid for Dutch telecom KPN

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013 file photo, Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim speaks during news conference at the Soumaya museum in Mexico City. TracFone, a phone company owned by Slim, has been ordered by the state's public utility regulator to pay California $24.4 million in unpaid fees and interest. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills, File)

AMSTERDAM (AP) — America Movil SAB, owned by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, will launch a 7.2 billion euro ($9.6 billion) bid for the part of Dutch telecom company Royal KPN NV it doesn’t already own, in a challenge to a rival offer for KPN’s prized German mobile group E-Plus.

FILE – In this Jan. 14, 2013 file photo, Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim speaks during news conference at the Soumaya museum in Mexico City. TracFone, a phone company owned by Slim, has been ordered by the state’s public utility regulator to pay California $24.4 million in unpaid fees and interest. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills, File)

Movil’s 2.40 euros per share bid for KPN announced Friday offers a 20 percent premium on Thursday’s closing price, valuing the company’s stock at around 10.3 billion euros, and the 70 percent it doesn’t already own at 7.2 billion euros.

The news of the approach sent KPN shares 17 percent higher to 2.34 euros in Amsterdam.

The offer price is miles above the 1.60 euros KPN’s shares were trading at in mid-July before Movil’s arch-rival, Telefonica SA, announced plans to buy E-Plus from KPN for around 8.1 billion euros.

The Telefonica deal was backed by KPN’s management, but most analysts believe Slim wanted E-Plus for himself. E-Plus has a 15 percent stake in the German market that would be near-impossible to build from scratch.

Movil said it initially invested in KPN two years ago to improve its geographical diversity. Now it wants a controlling stake “to facilitate greater operational cooperation and co-ordination between the two companies.”

KPN spokesman Ward Snijders said Friday the company is “studying” the America Movil bid.

The Telefonica deal for E-Plus must still be approved by KPN shareholders — including Movil — and it is expected to receive scrutiny from European regulators as it would combine Germany’s third and fourth largest mobile providers.

Movil said Friday it is still pondering which way to vote on the deal — in spite of launching the bid for the rest of KPN. It said its offer for KPN will be dependent on receiving at least 50 percent of KPN’s shares and there being “no competing transactions having been announced or made by any party.”

KPN, which once advised investors not to sell shares to Slim, said its board and managers would appraise the potential benefits of a Movil takeover “consistent with their fiduciary duties and their commitment to the continuity of KPN and the interests of all stakeholders.”

Movil built its stake in KPN over the past two years, in its first major foray outside Latin America. KPN’s shares were worth more than $8 apiece when it began.

KPN has run into financial trouble after the increasing use of smartphones began eating into margins in the Netherlands, where KPN has 40 percent of the mobile market. Customers with smartphones decided to ditch KPN’s highly priced SMS text messaging service en masse for cheaper Internet-based services such as WhatsApp and Skype, and KPN’s profits plunged.

Then KPN paid more than it had expected to the Dutch government in an auction for fourth generation mobile licenses, loading its balance sheet with debt.

In May, the company issued 3 billion euros worth of new shares in order to avoid a repeat of the near-insolvency it suffered in the early 2000s. Even after the share issue, KPN carried 9.5 billion euros in debt at the end of the second quarter.

It had recorded a second-quarter net profit of 107 million euros on sales of 2.94 billion euros.

Related posts

Kenya drops airport deal with Adani Group after US indictments

Why Donald Trump’s election win fuelled a stock market surge

Black entrepreneurs are often shut out from capital, but here’s how some are removing barriers