Gulf Today

Telefonica cuts debt by $169 million

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MADRID: Telefonica expects to cut its debt by 200 million euros ($169 million) following the sale of a controllin­g stake in its optic fibre network in Colombia to buyout fund KKR, the Spanish telecom operator said on Saturday.

It plans to spin off the unit but retain a 40 per cent stake, while a local unit of KKR is taking the rest.

The operation values the fibre network in Colombia at $500 million.

KKR intends to expand coverage to 4.3 million households in the country by 2024 from 1.2 million at the moment, the buyout fund said in a statement.

Spanish bank Santander advised Telefonica on the transactio­n, a source with knowledge of the deal said.

The deal still requires regulatory approvals, KKR and the operator said.

Telefonica is reducing its debt by selling assets, including the 6.2 billion euro ($5.25 billion) sale of its Telxius mobile tower masts to American Tower earlier this year.

Like its European rivals, Telefonica has faced growth issues aside from the impact of the pandemic and is also seeking investors for its other businesses, such as logistics arm Zeleris amid a pandemic-induced boom in the sector.

The company is also keen to extract value from its Telefonica Tech unit, which provides IOT (Internet of Things), Big Data, cloud, and cybersecur­ity services and in which it may sell a minority stake in coming months.

Telefonica announced that it had awarded a contract for its Spanish 5G radio network to Nokia and Ericsson for the frequency bands 3.5GHZ and 700MHZ.

Spanish telecoms operator Telefonica plans to raise as much as 500 million euros ($591.35 million) with the sale of a minority stake in its technology unit, citing financial sources.

Spain’s Telefonica launched its national 5G network, promising to bring the the nextgenera­tion mobile internet service to 75% of the population this year.

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A building bearing the name of the Spanish telecommun­ications company Telefonica is seen in Caracas, Venezuela.
↑ A building bearing the name of the Spanish telecommun­ications company Telefonica is seen in Caracas, Venezuela.

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