Daily Mail

Talktalk tycoons in line for £450m takeover windfall

As hedge fund launches £1.1billion bid for telecoms firm....

- By Matt Oliver

A HEDGE fund boss nicknamed ‘the Rottweiler’ has swooped on the budget broadband provider Talktalk – with a £ 1.1bn takeover offer.

Martin Hughes has offered 97p a share through his firm Toscafund, which already owns a 29.1pc stake in the telecoms company.

The 59-year- old is said to believe Talktalk is undervalue­d by the market after shares sank to record lows during the coronaviru­s crisis.

Yesterday, Talktalk’s stock rose 17.1pc, or 14.2p, to 97.5p.

A deal at 97p a share would trigger a £332m payout for its executive chairman, Sir Charles Dunstone, who is the founder and biggest shareholde­r with a near-30pc stake.

Fellow telecoms tycoon David Ross, who has an 11pc stake in the firm, would get £124m.

But the bid is below the £1.5bn, or 135p per share, reportedly offered by Toscafund that was rejected by the board last year. At that point, Toscafund owned 19pc but it has since ramped up its holding to 29.1pc, just below Dunstone’s 29.9pc.

The hedge fund has said it will not press ahead without Dunstone’s blessing, however, and the 55-year-old could retain a stake if it is taken private.

Revealing the bid to investors yesterday, Talktalk said it had agreed to ‘progress the proposal further’.

Talktalk, which has more than 4m broadband customers, was founded by Dunstone in 2003 as part of the Carphone Warehouse business he started with Ross.

It was later spun off and listed separately in 2010 under former chief executive Dido Harding, who now heads NHS Test and Trace. She left in 2017, two years after a devastatin­g cyber-attack that cost it £60m and led to the details of millions of customers being stolen.

Harding admitted she did not know whether the data had been protected using encryption.

Dunstone returned to take control in 2018 as the firm continued to struggle, putting a renewed focus on providing budget broadband.

It ditched its mobile offering and sold its cable-laying business to Cityfibre.

The bid from Toscafund comes as competitio­n in the UK telecoms sector is heating up, with a merger of mobile operator O2 and broadband and TV provider Virgin Media set to usher in more bundle deals.

But as firms spend billions of pounds on new 5G network equipment and fibre optic cables, investors have shown little enthusiasm for telecoms shares. BT hit an 11-year low earlier this year.

However, analysts believe that Toscafund could flush out other bids for the company. Mobile networks Vodafone

and Three could use the company to gain a foothold in the broadband market.

CCS Insight telecoms analyst Kester Mann said those firms might also view Talktalk as a bargain.

Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said going private would end an ‘unhappy stay on the markets’ – it is now well below its 2015 high of 415.1p.

Mould added: ‘Having been building a stake in recent years, Toscafund may have not unreasonab­ly decided it could do a better job of managing the assets itself out of the glare of public markets.’

 ??  ?? SIR CHARLES DUNSTONE: £332M STAKE
SIR CHARLES DUNSTONE: £332M STAKE
 ??  ?? DAVID ROSS: £124M STAKE
DAVID ROSS: £124M STAKE

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