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Altice seeks financing for Time Warner Cable bid:
sources
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[May 23, 2015]
By Liana B. Baker and Claire Ruckin
SAN FRANCISCO/LONDON (Reuters) - French
telecommunications group Altice SA is talking to several banks about
raising debt for a potential bid for Time Warner Cable Inc, the
second-largest U.S. cable operator, according to people familiar with
the matter.
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The talks are an important step for Altice in putting together a bid
for Time Warner Cable, which is also being courted by Charter
Communications Inc after Comcast Corp abandoned its $45.2 billion
offer for Time Warner Cable last month over U.S. antitrust concerns.
Altice is in discussions with banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co,
Nomura Co Ltd, BNP Paribas SA, Societe Generale, Barclays Plc and
Royal Bank of Canada about a financing package to support a proposed
acquisition, the people said.
The size of the package has yet to be determined and there is no
certainty that a bid will materialize, some of the people said. The
financing could comprise of a dollar-denominated high-yield bond, as
well as loans, according to one of the sources. The sources asked
not to be identified because the talks are confidential.
Shares of Time Warner Cable rose 2.7 percent to $170.0 in Friday
morning trade in New York, giving the company a market
capitalization of about $48 billion. Shares of Altice were up 2.5
percent at 130.9 euros in Amsterdam, valuing the company at around
$32 billion.
Earlier this week, Altice agreed to buy U.S. regional cable company
Suddenlink Communications for $9.1 billion from private equity
investors, making a first move across the Atlantic.
After spending 36 billion euros ($40 billion) on acquisitions in the
past 18 months, Altice will have to be mindful of its finances,
according to credit analysts. The Moody's rating agency put Altice
under review for a possible downgrade this week, following the
Suddenlink deal.
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"They would probably need to issue equity if they want to do a big
deal in the next twelve months," said Osant Jaeger, a credit analyst
at Moody's.
Altice's controlling shareholder Patrick Drahi and Time Warner Cable
Chief Executive Robert Marcus met in New York on Wednesday as part
of preliminary talks between the two companies, according to two of
the sources.
Altice and Time Warner Cable declined to comment. Representatives
for the banks either declined to comment or did not respond
immediately to requests for comment.
(Additional reporting by Leila Abboud in Paris, Arno Schuetze in
Frankfurt and Robert Smith in London; Editing by Tiffany Wu)
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