|
1st November - Mobile phone group O2 has agreed
a takeover offer from Spanish telecom company Telefonica.
Telefonica is to pay £17.7bn ($31.6bn) for the firm
in order to get a foothold in two of Europe's largest mobile
phone markets - the UK and Germany.
Under the cash deal, Telefonica will pay 200 pence per share,
a 22% premium on Friday's closing price of 164.25p.
But with speculation rife that rival bids will follow, O2's
shares ended the day up more than 25% at 205.75 pence.
The main suitors in the past have been Germany's T-Mobile
and the Netherlands' KPN, which held abortive talks about
a potential joint bid earlier this year.
KPN - which had a solo bid rejected on price in 2004 - said
it had no intention of making another approach.
T-Mobile already has a foothold in the UK market under its
own brand, and might therefore face regulatory problems -
but could manage more money with a combined cash-and-shares
bid, said Deutsche Bank analyst Gareth Jenkins.
"Do I think someone else will come to the table? Absolutely,"
he said.
On the other hand, some analysts saw Telefonica's offer as
generous enough to make any counter-bid uneconomic.
"It's hard to see anyone coming in for O2 now,"
said James McCafferty at broker Seymour Pierce.
"This is a huge cash offer."
Complementary business
Telefonica, which has agreed a deal with the board of the
UK company, said O2 would retain its existing brand and continue
to be based in the UK.
"The combination with O2 is a logical step for Telefonica
in pursuing its strategic goal of providing its shareholders
with both growth and cash returns," Telefonica said in
a statement.
The deal is very good for shareholder value
Peter Erskine, O2
Q&A: O2's £18bn takeover
Check O2's share price
O2 chief executive Peter Erskine added: "This transaction
brings together two companies which are growing strongly with
highly complementary geographical activities."
The two firms said O2's business in the UK, Germany and Ireland
would go well with Telefonica's businesses in Latin America
and Spain.
Telefonica has a customer base of around 145 million and
around 173,000 staff.
The group added that the deal would produce "economies
of scale" - resulting in cost savings of an estimated
293m euros ($353m; £199m) a year by 2008.
It is funding the bid with a bridging loan underwritten by
Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Royal Bank of Scotland.
'Good value'
Mr Erskine told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that he believed
shareholders would accept the deal - which is likely to be
completed early next year.
O2 shareholders, including many small investors who picked
up stock at the time of the demerger from BT in 2001, will
receive 200p a share if the deal goes through.
"It is very good for shareholder value. It's an all-cash
offer. It's £2 a share, which is somewhere in the range
of a 25% premium over the last three months," Mr Erskine
said.
"It's also good for customers. They have no overlapping
territory, so they will be able to offer our customers better
roaming and better services around the world.
"Finally, it's very good for our people. Because there's
no overlapping territories, we can really build on what we've
got, as opposed to having to integrate and rationalise jobs."
Back to
News Reports
|