'Cable Cowboy' Malone
weighs his next move in Europe
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[June 06, 2016]
By Kate Holton
LONDON (Reuters) - A generation after
"Cable Cowboy" John Malone transformed the pay-TV sector in the
United States, he is back in the spotlight -- this time in Europe,
where he is plotting a role in the consolidation of the British
telecoms market.
Top of the billionaire rainmaker's wish list is what would be a
transformational deal between Liberty Global , the London- and
Denver-based cable operator Malone chairs, and Britain's Vodafone.
Combining their operations in Europe would create the continent's
biggest communications company with broadband and mobile operations
spanning several countries.
But with a market value of 61 billion pounds ($88 billion)and a
wildly different approach to debt and dealmaking, the blue-chip
British mobile operator, the world's second biggest, is not an easy
fit.
Any attempt at a merger would also be complicated by Malone's
preference for owning large chunks of the voting rights in his
firms, meaning the 75-year-old may need to persuade Vodafone to swap
assets or do individual market deals instead.
"John would like to do something in Europe, but he doesn't know what
to do and is reluctant to give up his super votes which would be the
case with Vodafone," an industry executive who knows Malone told
Reuters on the condition of anonymity.
The executive added: "There aren't many deals out there. There's
smallish things they could do but nothing that is transformative.
Deal guys get frustrated when there aren't any deals to do."
The two companies this year agreed a joint venture in the
Netherlands, a small market for both, in what was seen as a test
case for compatibility after they failed to agree a deal in any
other market despite months of negotiations.
The 50-50 joint venture after integration costs was valued at around
3.5 billion euros in combined revenue and capital expenditure.
Vodafone paid 1 billion euros in cash to Liberty to equalize
ownership.
The larger prize could be back on the table after European
regulators last month blocked the sale of Britain's second biggest
mobile operator, O2, to CK Hutchison <0001.HK>.
With O2 back in play, the asset, owned by Spain's Telefonica <TEF.MC>,
could be used as a bargaining chip.
"If Vodafone felt that Liberty was serious (about looking at O2)
they'd probably come back to the table," a top 10 Vodafone investor
told Reuters, asking not to be named because of company policy.
He noted the talks in 2015 broke down over complications over
valuations, not over the overall strategic vision.
"When they were in talks I don't think there was any debate around
the strategic rationale or the size of the prize."
JOINING FORCES
Malone, the largest private landowner in the United States with 2.2
million acres, has built his empire over more than 40 years of
dealmaking in the cable and pay-TV industry.
His Liberty Global is the world's largest international TV and
broadband company, operating in more than 30 countries in Europe,
Latin America and the Caribbean through a series of different brand
names. In many of its markets, including Europe, it would benefit
from owning a mobile operator, however.
Vodafone boasts 462 million customers across Europe, Africa, India,
Turkey and Egypt, but only owns mobile in some of them and could use
its own fixed-line assets.
Investors in favor of combining the companies' European operations
say synergies would help address changed consumer behavior, where
millions of people now watch entertainment on mobile phones and
through internet-connected TVs.
[to top of second column] |
Liberty Media Corp. chairman John Malone arrives at the annual Allen
and Co. conference at the Sun Valley, Idaho Resort July 12, 2013.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
But although a deal may make sense on paper, analysts say there are several
serious obstacles to making it a reality.
Malone owns around 24 percent of Liberty's voting shares, and merging Liberty
and Vodafone's European bases would likely dilute that control.
"For him to do a transformational deal but lose control, it's not great," said
one telecommunications banker, who asked not to be named. "It's a bit like
selling out without a premium."
Arete analyst Steve Malcolm said the structure might not work for some Vodafone
shareholders.
"There are plenty of shareholders who probably wouldn't mind him (Malone) having
a lot of influence but there are some who simply can't own shares in a company
where they are subordinated to a man who owns 5 percent of the equity," Malcolm
said.
"The use of super voting shares means that Liberty Global has a quirky capital
structure. It works for a very loyal band of Malone followers who are happy with
the situation but it doesn't always work in a more widely-held UK Plc-type of
company."
The two firms are also culturally different in other ways.
Vittorio Colao, who leads the FTSE-listed Vodafone, is much more cautious about
debt-fueled deals than his American counterpart. Vodafone had net debt of 29.2
billion pounds at the end of March, compared with its market cap of 62 billion
pounds.
In contrast, Liberty is highly geared. Liberty Global Group had $45 billion of
net debt, compared with a market capitalization of $38 billion. Combining all
the debt issued through its different brands, it is one of the biggest issuers
of sub-investment grade bonds in the world.
And then there is tax. The fact that Liberty is able to use historical losses
from its British operations to offset the tax it pays as a group would likely
complicate any attempt to go the route of doing just a British deal.
Malone has said he believes the two firms would make a good fit. For his part,
Colao regularly dances around the question.
"I almost see two lines that tend to go to the same point in the future," he
told analysts in 2014. "So they're not parallel, but when will these lines cross
it depends on the evolution of the company and the corporate strategies of two
different entities.
"I cannot say when and what will determine the crossing."
($1 = 0.6936 pounds)
(Additional reporting by Paul Sandle and Pamela Barbaglia; Editing by Sonya
Hepinstall)
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