Daily Mail

Vodafone offloads Italy arm for £6.8bn

Investors to get £3.4bn as boss hails ‘final step’ in makeover

- By Leah Montebello

VODAFONE is selling its italian business to a Swiss rival for £6.8bn in the ‘third and final step’ of its European makeover.

the telecoms giant has agreed to sell Vodafone italia to Swisscom as part of wider plans to reshape its sprawling business.

it follows weeks of speculatio­n about the fate of the italian unit, which saw Vodafone snub an offer from French telecoms operator iliad in January. Vodafone yesterday said the deal with Swisscom, which is majority-owned by the Swiss govern three ment, would allow it to leave italy, where it was ‘not possible’ to achieve adequate returns.

Announcing the deal, the FtSE 100 company also revealed it would return up to £3.4bn to shareholde­rs through buybacks and cut its dividend to 4.5 cents a share (3.8p) from next year, down from 9 cents (7p) in 2024. Vodafone shares rose 5.7pc. the sale of the italian business is the third major move by chief executive Margherita Della Valle, who has been looking to simplify the company’s operations amid pressure from shareholde­rs.

Since taking over in January last year, the italian-born boss has dumped Vodafone’s Spanish business in a £4.4bn deal with Zegona and has been spearheadi­ng a planned £ 15bn megamerger between Vodafone and UK, which is owned by the Hong Kong conglomera­te cK Hutchison.

Della Valle said: ‘i am announcing the third and final step in the reshaping of our European operations. Going forward, our businesses will be operating in growing telco markets – where we hold strong positions – enabling us to deliver predictabl­e, stronger growth in Europe.’

the planned buyback will be made up of £1.7bn from the sale of Vodafone Spain and up to £1.7bn from the sale of italian arm, which is subject to regulatory and other approvals, the company said.

Sophie Lund-Yates, lead analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: ‘Vodafone’s italian business has been struggling, so shedding this weight should help the group refocus.’

She added the announceme­nt of a buyback would also be seen by shareholde­rs as a ‘welcome token for their patience in what has been a difficult period’.

However, some analysts have warned that slashing the dividend would hurt investors in the long run. Russ Mould at AJ Bell said: ‘A lower dividend over the long term reduces Vodafone’s ongoing financial commitment to shareholde­rs. this may help put capital allocation on a more sustainabl­e footing, but it does dilute one of the key reasons people hold the shares.’

And the company is still grappling with its flailing German business, which remains its largest market. Karen Egan, at research group Enders Analysis, said: ‘the company is highlighti­ng how well it is positioned to grow now without italy and Spain, and with the prospect of a better position in the UK.

‘Germany is more important than ever, and the jury is still out on that turnaround.’

Voda’s German unit posted revenues of £2.5bn in the three months to the end of December, up just 0.3pc from the same period the year before.

And its planned merger with three is far from guaranteed.

the tie-up – which could create Britain’s biggest telecoms operator – is facing scrutiny from the competitio­n regulators, which have until next Friday to decide whether to launch a further investigat­ion into the deal.

 ?? ?? Revamp: Margherita Della Valle aims to simplify the telecoms giant
Revamp: Margherita Della Valle aims to simplify the telecoms giant

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