The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Cell C to seek 73% debt reduction in buyout deal

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Cell C Pty Ltd is seeking to cut its debt by 73% as part of a deal that will help South Africa’s third-largest mobilephon­e operator sell a stake to Blue Label Telecoms Ltd while retaining its operating licence, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The proposed transactio­n will see Cell C split about 9 billion rand (US$688mil) of borrowings into three special purpose vehicles, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the talks are private.

Alongside stake sales to Blue Label and payment services provider Net1 UEPS Technologi­es Inc, the plan will cut the overall debt to 6 billion rand from about 22 billion rand, they said.

The special purpose vehicles will take on debt held by South Africa’s Nedbank Group Ltd., a group of Chinese lenders, and a 400 million euro (US$446mil) bond issued by Cell C that matures in July 2018, the people said. In exchange, the vehicles will control a combined 30% stake in Cell C.

The proposal is the latest attempt by Cell C to push through the sale of a 45% shareholdi­ng to Johannesbu­rg-based Blue Label for 5.5 billion rand, a deal agreed in October after almost a year of talks.

It’s being cast as a debt refinancin­g rather than a takeover as South African regulators may demand a licence reapplicat­ion in the event of a change of ownership, the people said.

CellSAf, which is black controlled and owns 25% of Cell C, argues that such a transactio­n would unfairly dilute its shareholdi­ng and goes against South African initiative­s to distribute wealth to people discrimina­ted against during apartheid.

One of the SPVs will be held by CellSAf, according to the proposal. However, the shareholde­r hasn’t been officially informed and hasn’t authorised the creation of any SPVs to hold shares in Cell C, one of the people said.

Another SPV will be controlled by 3C, the Oger Telecom Ltd-controlled entity that previously controlled Cell C and wants to exit the company. An employee ownership scheme will own the third, according to the terms of the proposal.

“We have not announced any detail regarding the SPV structure,” Michael Campbell, Blue Label’s head of investor relations, said in an emailed response to questions. “Further particular­s will be included in the circular to be released later in June.” Cell C declined to comment.

Some of the Cell C debt will be owed by the SPVs and will be secured by shares in Cell-C, the Net1 board said in emailed response to questions, without providing further details.

Under the new terms of the transactio­n, Net1 will take a 15% stake in Cell C in exchange for taking over 2 billion rand of debt.

Other major Cell C shareholde­rs will include the company’s management, led by chief executive officer Jose Dos Santos, according to a circular sent to Blue Label shareholde­rs. The CEO didn’t respond to phone calls seeking comment.

In February, Cell C rejected an attempt by Pretoria-based Telkom SA SOC Ltd to gatecrash the talks with a US$1bil offer.

A spokeswoma­n for Nedbank declined to comment. A phone call to Oger’s head office wasn’t answered.

 ??  ?? Cutting debt: A woman uses her mobile phone in front of a store with Cell C branding in Kwandengez­i, South Africa. The company is planning to cut its debt to 6 billion rand from 22 billion rand.
Cutting debt: A woman uses her mobile phone in front of a store with Cell C branding in Kwandengez­i, South Africa. The company is planning to cut its debt to 6 billion rand from 22 billion rand.

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