The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

NTT to take full control of mobile phone unit Docomo

- The Yomiuri Shimbun The Yomiuri Shimbun

NTT Corp. recent ly announced plans to acquire all of the shares in NTT Docomo, Inc. to take full control of the mobile phone unit. The telecommun­ications company, which currently has a 66.2% stake in Docomo, will spend ¥4.25 trillion to acquire the remaining shares in the takeover bid. NTT will pay ¥3,900 a share. Shares in Docomo closed at ¥3,213 on Sept. 29.

The move will allow NTT to invest as a group in the next-generation, highspeed mobile phone standard 5G and respond flexibly to Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s call for a reduction in mobile phone charges.

The takeover would be the largest ever for a Japanese company, according to merger and acquisitio­n advisory firm Recof Corp.

NTT Corp. is a holding company with five major subsidiari­es: Docomo, NTT Data Corp., NTT East Corp., NTT West Corp. and NTT Communicat­ions Corp. Docomo and NTT Data are listed companies, while NTT East,

The NTT Docomo logo is seen at a store in Tokyo.

NTT West and NTT Communicat­ions are wholly owned units.

Docomo was spun off from NTT in 1992 and listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s First Section in 1998. The mobile phone subsidiary will be delisted if

the takeover bid is successful.

The domestic mobile phone industry is dominated by Docomo, KDDI’s au and SoftBank, with profit margins of as high as nearly 20%.

NTT will be able to speed up decision- making by making Docomo a wholly owned subsidiary. NTT will also be able to raise funds for capital investment more easily if all of Docomo’s profits are incorporat­ed into the group.

There has been growing criticism over the opaqueness of parent-subsidiary listings, or parent companies that are listed on the same exchange as their subsidiari­es, as is the case with NTT and Docomo.

The takeover would help NTT fend off such criticism and accelerate investment in 5G and the internet of things, or the networking of everyday devices via the internet.

With competitio­n heating up in the global telecommun­ications industry among companies including Chinese telecommun­ications equipment giant Huawei Technologi­es Co., Japanese firms have been lagging behind.

The move is also seen as an attempt to prepare for the lower mobile phone fees sought by Suga.

At a press conference on Sept. 29, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said: “The public is very interested in seeing mobile phone fees reduced. It is important that procedures are transparen­t.”

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