Bangkok Post

OneWeb-Intelsat merger in the works

Deal valued at $10-14 billion

- BLOOMBERG OLGA KHARIF ALEX SHERMAN EMMA ORR

PORTLAND/NEW YORK: SoftBank Group Corp, the technology giant controlled by billionair­e Masayoshi Son, is in talks to merge the satellite start-up it’s backing, OneWeb Ltd, with satellite provider Intelsat SA, according to people familiar with the matter.

“A deal is conditione­d on setting aside money to purchase Intelsat bonds from investors at a price higher than their trading prices last week, though that would still be below par value,’’ said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private informatio­n.

The pact, potentiall­y valued at $10 billion to $14 billion, would allow OneWeb and Intelsat to save on costs as they seek to develop connection­s that can deliver video and broadband services anywhere in the world, including its less-developed parts.

Intelsat operates a combined satellite-terrestria­l communicat­ions network, while OneWeb is developing small, low Earthorbit­ing satellites.

Though the transactio­n would be valued at about $18 billion if Intelsat’s bonds were acquired at 100 cents on the dollar, SoftBank “aims to pay about a bit more than half the debt’s face value,’’ one of the people said. “If an agreement is reached, the valuation would likely fall to between $10 billion and $14 billion.’’

“The bond movement on Monday has made a deal less likely to occur because the offer price is now lower than where the bonds are trading,’’ said the people.

Intelsat’s $2 billion of 7.75% notes due 2021 jumped more than 15 cents to trade as high as 61 cents on the dollar on Monday, the biggest jump since 2014, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The bonds were quoted below 20 cents in July.

OneWeb has also held discussion­s with SES SA, Inmarsat Plc and Telesat Holdings Inc, the people said. Intelsat and SES declined to comment, and OneWeb and the other companies didn’t immediatel­y return requests for comment.

“Intelsat and OneWeb have complement­ary radio-frequency licences that they could use to better to provide internet access on airplanes, among other markets,’’ said Andrew Spinola, an analyst at Wells Fargo & Co, in a research note.

“The companies already are working with Gogo Inc on such a service,’’ he said.

“Intelsat’s a highly leveraged company,” said Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Steve Flynn. “The capital structure was definitely under a lot of stress, so any transactio­n with capital infusion would likely be a positive.”

Intelsat bondholder­s saw their securities gain more than $660 million after reports of SoftBank’s interest in a deal. Nine of Intelsat’s bonds maturing over the next seven years traded at a market value of around $10.2 billion on Monday, up from about $9.6 billion on Friday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

OneWeb is the latest creation of Greg Wyler, who has spent more than a decade trying to connect poorer, less-developed parts of the world to the internet. He hopes to launch a constellat­ion of satellites that will extend the networks of mobile operators and internet service providers to serve new coverage areas at a lower cost.

The company raised $1.2 billion from Tokyo-based SoftBank and other investors in December.

The funding was designed to help develop small satellites and pay for the constructi­on of a facility in Florida that will churn out 15 of the devices a week, according to OneWeb, based at Exploratio­n Park, Florida, an area near Kennedy Space Center.

Son, the chief executive officer of SoftBank, has been on a tear of big investment­s, including the $32 billion acquisitio­n of chip designer ARM Holdings Plc and the creation of the $100 billion Vision Fund with Saudi Arabia and other backers.

Tokyo-based SoftBank is also one of Japan’s biggest wireless providers and controls Sprint Corp, the fourth-biggest wireless company in the US.

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