Vodafone, Liberty Discuss Netherlands Joint Venture -- Update
February 02 2016 - 9:59AM
Dow Jones News
(Rewrites, adds detail.)
By Simon Zekaria and Razak Musah Baba
LONDON--British telecommunications giant Vodafone Group PLC
(VOD.LN) Tuesday said it was in talks with U.S. peer Liberty Global
PLC (LBTYA) to create a joint venture in the Netherlands, four
months after talks between the firms collapsed.
In a statement, Vodafone, based in Newbury, England, said the
venture would incorporate both companies' operating businesses in
the Netherlands. It said discussions were ongoing and didn't extend
beyond the Dutch venture, adding that there was no certainty of any
agreement.
Vodafine's statement didn't provide financial details, further
details on the structure of the venture or a timeline for
negotiations. Liberty Global wasn't immediately available for
comment.
At 1439 GMT, Vodafone shares had fallen 1.4% to 222 pence,
valuing the company at 59.9 billion pounds ($86.3 billion).
Vodafone has a 39% share of core mobile revenue in the
Netherlands, and at the end of last year it began legal action
against competitor Royal KPN NV (KKPNY), alleging its Dutch rival
delayed the introduction of Vodafone's competing suite of
television, fixed-line broadband and fixed-line telephone services
in the Netherlands by three years. Liberty, which is based in the
U.S. but focused on Europe, acquired KPN's Dutch cable rival Ziggo
for nearly $10 billion in 2014.
Last September Vodafone terminated talks with Liberty regarding
a possible exchange of selected assets between the two companies,
without disclosing the types of assets under consideration or
geographic locality. Vodafone had confirmed early-stage talks in
June 2015, but ruled out any discussions over a full-blown
merger.
In May 2015, Liberty Global Chairman John Malone signalled his
company's interest in a deal with Vodafone, saying the U.K.
telecoms firm, which is the largest global mobile operator after
China Mobile Ltd., would be a "great fit" with his cable operator,
which is the largest in Europe by number of subscribers.
Liberty, with headquarters in both Englewood, Colo., and London,
operates in some of Europe's biggest markets, including Germany,
the Netherlands and the U.K., where it owns Virgin Media Inc.
Liberty has been on the acquisition hunt in recent years to snap up
cable operators in Europe, where it has the majority of its
broadband networks.
Vodafone, meanwhile, has also been looking at European
acquisitions. Indeed it has purchased fixed-line assets in Germany
and Spain to shore up its flagging mobile business in Europe and
bolster its position as a unified media player in a
rapidly-evolving market of bundled services.
Like Liberty, Vodafone derives the majority of its profit and
sales from the continent, with a focus on Germany, Italy and
Spain.
The talks between Liberty and Vodafone are part of a recent
frenzy of European television and communications deal-making in
recent years, with telecom and cable operators eager to benefit
from the so-called "quadruple-play" -offering services that
encompass fixed telephony, mobile, Internet broadband and
pay-television. The packaged offerings are aimed at boosting
subscriber revenue and winning consumer loyalty.
Over-the-top streaming platforms such as Netflix Inc. have also
started to eat into their potential market, adding pressure to bulk
up. The continent's telecom players have suffered in recent years
from fragmented markets across Europe and slow growth, which hasn't
picked up much since the depths of the global economic crisis and
Europe's painful recession.
Write to Simon Zekaria at simon.zekaria@wsj.com and Razak Musah
Baba at razak.baba@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 02, 2016 10:44 ET (15:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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