Regulator to Oppose TPG, Vodafone Hutchison Australia Merger -- Update
May 08 2019 - 6:05AM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--One of the biggest recent deals in
Australia faces collapse after the country's antitrust regulator
said it would block the combination of TPG Telecom Ltd. and
Vodafone Hutchison Australia.
The companies had been seeking approval to create a company with
an enterprise value of about 15 billion Australian dollars (US$10.5
billion), including debt, bringing together TPG's more than 1.9
million broadband subscribers and Vodafone's roughly 6 million
mobile-service subscribers.
However, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said
Wednesday it opposed the deal, which it said would reduce
competition in the country's already very concentrated
telecommunications markets.
In response, the two companies said they planned to launch legal
action and would seek approval for the tie-up in the federal court.
The pair have given their deal until the end of August next year to
allow for the court case and the merger process.
The regulator's decision was inadvertently published online on
its mergers register and quickly confirmed in a brief statement to
the Australian Securities Exchange, sparking a sharp drop in TPG
shares. The company, which now has a market value of about A$5.63
billion, ended the day down almost 14%.
The ACCC said the proposed merger would, in particular,
substantially lessen competition in the supply of mobile services
since it would preclude TPG from entering as a fourth
mobile-network operator in Australia.
"TPG is the best prospect Australia has for a new mobile network
operator to enter the market, and this is likely the last chance we
have for stronger competition in the supply of mobile services,"
Rod Sims, chairman of the regulator, said.
Analysts had considered there was a greater chance of regulatory
approval for the deal after TPG abandoned efforts in January to
build a mobile network to challenge Vodafone and the country's two
biggest operators, Telstra Corp. and Singapore Telecommunications
Ltd.-owned Optus. TPG made that decision, having invested about
A$100 million in early work, after Canberra blocked use of
equipment made by China's Huawei Technologies Co. in the rollout of
next-generation 5G mobile infrastructure on national security
grounds.
Australia's telecommunications operators have struggled in
recent years with intense competition in the mobile market and in
fixed-line services as the federal government pushes ahead with a
nationwide broadband network, which sells capacity to
operators.
In rejecting the planned merger, Mr. Sims said the ACCC
anticipated TPG would end up rolling out its mobile network if it
didn't combine with Vodafone Hutchison, characterizing it as a
"commercial imperative" for TPG to offer a mix of fixed and mobile
services.
He said TPG has a record for disrupting the telecom sector and
was expected to bring cheaper mobile plans and large data
allowances with its own network, competing strongly with the
incumbents. He added the company had already purchased mobile
spectrum and had an extensive fiber transmission network, a large
customer base and well-established brands.
The regulator said Vodafone has moved beyond mobile, entering
the fixed-broadband sector, which was also likely to improve
competition.
The ACCC said Telstra, Optus and Vodafone control about 87% of
the mobile-services market. Similarly, in the fixed-broadband
market Telstra, TPG and Optus collectively have a roughly 85%
share.
Vodafone Hutchison Chief Executive Inaki Berroeta said the
company remained committed to a merger with TPG and believed a
combination would bring real benefits to consumers. He said
Vodafone had a less than 1% share of the fixed-broadband sector,
and there was little overlap with TPG.
TPG Chairman David Teoh said while the company respected the
regulator's process, the decision had significant implications for
Australian consumers and had to be challenged. A combination would
create a new competitive force, and the biggest companies in the
industry would only entrench their power if left unchallenged, he
said.
Billed as a merger of equals, the combined company was to have
been 50.1% owned by Vodafone Hutchison, a 50-50 venture between the
U.K.'s Vodafone Group PLC and an Australian company controlled by
Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd. The remaining interest
would have been held by TPG's shareholders.
TPG and Vodafone Hutchison anticipated substantial cost savings
and revenue benefits from cross-selling products, and an enlarged
company with revenue, estimated when the merger was first announced
last August, of about A$6 billion.
The deal was one of the biggest mergers and acquisitions
unveiled in 2018, according to data compiled by Mergermarket, which
estimated it was the third-biggest deal of the year, behind the
spinoff of supermarket chain Coles Group Ltd. by Wesfarmers Ltd.
and the sale of a majority interest in Sydney Motorway Corp. by the
government of the state of New South Wales.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 08, 2019 05:50 ET (09:50 GMT)
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