Telkom is considering making an offer to buy a majority stake in Cell C that would lead to a combination of South Africa’s third- and fourth-largest mobile phone companies, according to people familiar with the matter.
The former landline monopoly is seeking management control of the Johannesburg-based carrier, said the people, who asked not to be named as the plans are private. Pretoria-based Telkom hasn’t made a final decision and the deal could yet fall through, they said.
Telkom and Cell C declined to comment.
Shares in Blue Label Telecoms, which owns 45% of Cell C, gained as much as 8.7%, the most since 20 July, and traded 4.2% higher at R5.75 as of 11.09am in Johannesburg. Telkom fell 4.3%.
A tie-up between Cell C and Telkom’s mobile phone division would create a business with about 21.5 million subscribers. That would pose a slightly greater threat to the dominance of South Africa’s top two operators, Vodacom and MTN, which have more than 70 million customers between them.
Telkom has been investing heavily in mobile and data services to offset the decline in landline use, and is almost 41% owned by the government.
Debt restructured
Telkom initially attempted to takeover Cell C last year, only to be rejected in favour of a recapitalisation plan led by Blue Label. That deal reduced Cell C’s debt by two-thirds to less than R6-billion, and the firm last month refinanced R1.4-billion rand of borrowings on better terms.
Even so, Blue Label’s shares have slumped 62% this year, partly on concerns about the cost of providing Cell C with additional cash and loans. Telkom’s stock has gained 20%, valuing the company at R29-billion. — (c) 2018 Bloomberg LP