Business Standard

Vodafone talks raise more questions than answers

- BY FIONA MAHARGBRAV­O

It is good to talk. And Vodafone is right to open formal, if non-committal, lines of communicat­ion with Liberty Global. The $100-billion UK mobile giant says it is discussing asset swaps with Europe’s leading cable group. Vodafone shares fell 2 per cent in morning trading, suggesting disappoint­ment among investors who’d thought a merger was on the cards. Smaller scale M&A is probably the right way forward but it could get complicate­d.

Few quibble with the strategic logic of finding some way to combine Vodafone and Liberty’s footprints, particular­ly in northern Europe. Analysts at Morgan Stanley reckon a combinatio­n would create £15.7 billion ($24 billion) in savings. Joining forces would produce a powerful player selling a “converged” package of TV, broadband, landline and mobile services. Liberty’s chairman, John Malone, said a tie-up in Europe would create “enormous” shareholde­r value in an interview on May 19.

A straightfo­rward merger looks difficult. Vodafone’s enterprise value is about £92 billion ($140 billion) while Liberty’s is just under $90 billion. Investors wondered if Vodafone could ease the path to a big deal by first spinning off its emerging market assets. Even then, governance could prove tricky. Malone controls Liberty through supervotin­g shares. The companies also have different views on capital structure and returns. In Malone’s words, Vodafone has low leverage, low risk and high cash payout, whereas Liberty prefers to grow equity value.

That may explain why Vodafone said on June 5 that the two were thinking about an “exchange of selected assets”. This would be cleaner than an unwieldy joint venture, but also raises questions. The pair mainly overlap in Germany, the Netherland­s and Britain. It is hard to see Vodafone, which already owns Kabel Deutschlan­d, leaving Germany to Malone. It could swap its UK and Dutch assets for Liberty’s German businesses which have similar enterprise values, says RBC. But a German deal may have antitrust hurdles to leap, since the two would create the dominant player in that market.

Vodafone’s shares may have sagged, but they are still 7.5 per cent higher than before speculatio­n over a tie-up intensifie­d on May 19. Hammering out a deal will be difficult, but ultimately may well be worth the trouble.

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