The Mail on Sunday

How BT stalker (and ally of Macron) built £10bn empire ...on a big break in Beijing

- By Luke Barr and Amy-Jo Crowley

Intrigue deepens as Ministers probe French tycoon with largest stake in telecoms giant

PERHAPS it is understand­able that the French-Moroccan billionair­e stalking BT was, until recently, unknown to most Britons. One of the most powerful businessme­n in France and regarded by some as an ally of President Emmanuel Macron, Patrick Drahi had built up his sprawling empire while barely troubling the UK.

But in the past year he has exploded on to the scene, ruffling feathers not only in the telecoms industry and stock market, but with senior figures in Whitehall.

Last week, Ministers extended an investigat­ion into his interest in BT, already under way for seven weeks. That is unlikely to trouble a man so clearly used to biding his time.

Drahi, worth an estimated £5billion, has spent three decades building up his vast network of companies across France, Israel, Luxembourg and beyond.

The Mail on Sunday can this weekend reveal his entreprene­urial endeavours stretch back to the early 1990s when he was awarded a mandate for the launch of a cable network in Beijing.

He slowly built his expertise, first advising European cable firm UPC on its acquisitio­ns strategy, then creating his company, Altice, in 2001. But analysis of his business journey suggests it has only been in the past decade that his group reached a significan­t global scale.

At first largely limited to France, Altice has in more recent years used the availabili­ty of cheap debt to snap up rivals in Europe and the US to build the $11.7billion (£10billion) behemoth of today.

Not much is publicly known about Drahi, who also owns auctioneer Sotheby’s. But in France he remains a significan­t influence.

He has stakes in venerable Leftwing daily Liberation, co-founded in 1973 by French philosophe­r Jean-Paul Sartre, and magazine L’Express. He has also been described as a ‘friend’ of Macron. Drahi’s firm was also forced to respond to reports in 2016 linking him to the Panama Papers – a giant leak of private financial informatio­n on offshore holdings – with the telecoms mogul’s people issuing a fierce rebuttal of any wrongdoing at the time.

Other analysis also shows how Drahi’s vast business empire has spawned firms in other tax-friendly vicinities such as Luxembourg and Guernsey. Again, there is no suggestion of impropriet­y.

But there is growing interest in his activities ever since Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng confirmed an investigat­ion into Drahi’s stake in BT.

The group, formerly known as British Telecom, provides the UK with its internet and telecom services through its fibre infrastruc­ture company Openreach, as well as owning mobile network EE and providing security software. It also provides service contracts across Government department­s and it is understood to be used by Britain’s security forces. Altice Europe increased its stake in BT from 12.1 per cent, first declared just over a year ago, to 18 per cent in mid-December, making it the single biggest shareholde­r.

At that stage Drahi said he did not plan to buy the business outright.

But his interest has sparked widespread speculatio­n that he may still launch an £18billion takeover of the national asset, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange.

A Government source said

BT, Britain’s largest telecommun­ications provider, is the ‘exact kind of critical infrastruc­ture’ that national security legislatio­n is meant to protect. It is not yet clear what issues are being investigat­ed by officials, but it is understood intelligen­ce is being shared across different ministeria­l department­s.

Only last week the investigat­ion was extended amid reports the Government had requested more informatio­n about the situation – piquing interest.

It is almost certain the Government would intervene in any takeover attempt. The most drastic outcome could even include Kwarteng forcing Drahi to sell his existing shares, City sources suggested.

The billionair­e has a reputation for slashing costs. He was once described by the Financial Times as the ‘king of cost cutting’.

The newspaper said suppliers to SFR were asked for big discounts after he bought the French telecoms giant. It is unclear if concerns about such strategies, or the potential use of debt in any acquisitio­n of BT, form part of the Government’s worries.

One City lawyer described the purpose of the investigat­ion as a ‘mystery’, but said the recent delay means there ‘must have been some issues it wants to work through’.

The lawyer said: ‘Altice’s chief executive doesn’t have the best reputation for cost cutting and shedding jobs’.

Carl Murdock-Smith, a telecoms analyst at Berenberg Bank, expressed similar observatio­ns, adding that Drahi’s ‘love of leverage’ – using debt to buy companies – was self-evident.

He said: ‘That can make you rich when it works, but is it the approach for a strategic national asset?’

Sources said the Government might impose conditions on Drahi keeping his existing stake. At the very least, he has found himself on the Government’s radar – and he is likely to remain there until his long-term intentions become abundantly

clear.

 ?? ?? ALLY: Leader Emmanuel Macron and wife Brigitte
ALLY: Leader Emmanuel Macron and wife Brigitte
 ?? ?? PLUGGED IN: Patrick Drahi is now the biggest single shareholde­r in BT
PLUGGED IN: Patrick Drahi is now the biggest single shareholde­r in BT

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