Hallo ! Morgen ,am Montag, wird's spannend :
Bharti poised for MTN signal
By Jo Johnson in New Delhi and Alec Russell in Johannesburg
Published: May 2 2008 18:26 | Last updated: May 2 2008 18:26
Bharti Airtel, India’s leading mobile operator, said it could
“move pretty quickly” if the board of MTN, the South Africa-based
telecoms group, puts itself up for sale on Monday.Sunil Bharti
Mittal, chairman and managing director of Bharti Airtel, told the
Financial Times that he had “been approached by bankers in the last
few months in a much more frenzied manner” but had not formally
discussed any bid for MTN with his own board.
“I’m always willing to listen to investment bankers,but the real
point is whether there is actually a possibility to do this deal,”
he said. “We’ll never know unless MTN itself were to come back to
us. It’s not come to the stage where I’ve taken it to my
board.”
Bankers revealed that Anil Ambani, chairman of Reliance
Communications, held extensive talks with Phuthuma Nhleko, MTN
chief executive, in the first quarter of 2007 and was poised to
re-enter the fray.
The two Indian operators would be unlikely to have a clear run at
MTN. Several leading global players, including China Mobile and
Vodafone, have analysed how their businesses would combine
with those of the Johannesburg-based group.
One telecom executive said: “
Everybody has now talked to MTN and
the company has been completely analysed to death but its board is
still debating what to do. The strategy seems to work, I guess,
because the share price keeps going up.”People close to the MTN
board said it would not want to be seen selling 100 per cent of one
of South Africa’s flagship companies to foreign bidders, but would
be open to other structures. The board, which meets on Monday, is
chaired by Cyril Ramaphosa, a politician-turned-businessman.
Bankers said no transaction would be politically acceptable unless
it involved an integrated management structure, with a dual
headquarters and dual listing. Black empowerment groups would also
need to keep equity stakes.
People close to the situation said in one possible structure,
Bharti would make a partial tender offer for a 51 per cent stake in
MTN. The South African group could then keep its listing on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
MTN has a market capitalisation of $35.6bn and little net debt.
Mr Mittal said Bharti would have no difficulty in raising funds if
required. “Money’s not an issue. Our net debt is just $70m,” he
said. “The whole world wants to fund us.”
But bankers warned that financing the purchase of 100 per cent of
MTN would be a “struggle” for the Indian operators in nervous
capital markets. One suggested that Bharti might team up with a
sovereign wealth fund if it decided to go ahead with an offer.
Investment banks are jockeying for position on a deal. Bank
of America is advising Reliance; Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank
are advising MTN; Standard Chartered is advising Bharti; and
Singtel, which owns 30.5 per cent of Bharti, is being advised by
Goldman Sachs.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008"
Schönes Rest-Wochenende !
Gruß dubversion