EU Opens Probe Into Liberty Global-BASE Deal
October 05 2015 - 12:30PM
Dow Jones News
BRUSSELS—European Union antitrust regulators have launched an
investigation into Liberty Global PLC's latest €1.3 billion ($1.4
Billion) consolidation move in Europe, three days after EU
antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager warned that some
telecommunications mergers in the region could face a rough ride
from her agency.
The European Commission, the bloc's top antitrust regulator,
said on Monday it was concerned that the planned purchase of
Belgian mobile-phone operator BASE Company NV by Liberty Global's
Telenet Group Holding NV could lead to higher prices and less
choice for Belgian consumers.
The deal, announced in April, is expected to make Telenet's
mobile business more competitive and boost its presence in Belgium,
where Liberty Global has eyed growth.
BASE is the third-largest mobile network operator in Belgium
with 3.3 million mobile subscribers and adjusted revenue of €690
million last year. Its current owner is Dutch telecommunications
company Royal KPN NV.
In a statement, the commission said the deal "may reduce
competition in the retail mobile telephony market in Belgium, where
Telenet and BASE currently compete against each other."
"We want to make sure that consumers in Belgium do not suffer
higher prices and less choice as a result of this proposed
takeover," Ms. Vestager said.
A spokesman for Liberty Global said the company would continue
to work with antitrust authorities, and remains "confident that the
proposed transaction will be cleared."
A spokesman for BASE said the company is aware of the EU's
decision to open an investigation, but declined to comment
further.
The commission now has until Feb. 18, 2016 to investigate the
proposed acquisition and to decide whether to approve the deal or
ask the companies for concessions to ease its concerns. If it fails
to reach an agreement on how to bring the acquisition in line with
EU competition rules, the commission can also decide to block the
merger.
Telenet offers fixed-line services such as TV and broadband in
Flanders and parts of Brussels, as well as mobile services as a
so-called virtual operator. Such operators don't own their own
mobile networks but piggyback on those of others.
The EU said it had concerns that the merger "would significantly
reduce the incentives for BASE to offer virtual operators access to
its mobile network."
Once the deal is completed, Belgium's mobile phone market will
be divided across three large operators: Telenet and Mobistar SA,
with a market share of around 30% each, and Belgacom SA, with a
market share of around 40%.
Ms. Vestager has been vocal in recent weeks in warning against
mobile-phone mergers that reduce the number of operators in a given
country from four to three.
"Research seems to suggest that a reduction of the number of
players from four-to-three in a national mobile market in the EU
can lead to higher prices for consumers…but not that it leads to
more investment per subscriber," Ms. Vestager said in a speech in
New York on Friday.
Scandinavian telecom operators Telenor ASA and TeliaSonera AB in
September abandoned plans to merge their Danish businesses into a
joint venture after failing to secure EU antitrust approval.
Spun off from Liberty Media Corp., media mogul John Malone's
Liberty Global is the largest international cable company, with
operations in 14 countries. The London company has been shifting
focus to Europe, with a series of large acquisitions, including
U.K.'s Virgin Media Inc. and Dutch cable operator Ziggo NV, seeking
to profit from rising demand for bundles of television, broadband
and telephone and mobile services.
Write to Tom Fairless at tom.fairless@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 05, 2015 13:15 ET (17:15 GMT)
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