PARIS: France Telecom said it had reached a preliminary accord to buy out most of Egyptian tycoon Naguib Sawiris’ stake in their jointly owned telecom operator Mobinil, in a deal that will see the French group pay out about €1.5 billion, according to Reuters calculations.
France Telecom was already the biggest shareholder in Mobinil, and Egypt is a key part of its effort to expand in high-growth emerging markets in Africa and the Middle East.
The new accord simply accelerates the expected exit of Sawiris, who had a put option to sell out to France Telecom starting in September 2012.
The two sides were in talks in recent days over the terms of the put option because it ascribed a much higher value than Mobinil’s current market valuation, which has shriveled after Egypt’s revolution paralyzed much of the economy.
Under the terms of the accord, which still needs regulatory approval, France Telecom will buy Sawiris’ stake for LE 202.5 per share.
Then it will make a tender offer at the same price to the minority shareholders of the listed portion of Mobinil, known as ECMS.
Afterwards, France Telecom would end up owning 95 percent of Egypt’s largest mobile operator if all the minority shareholders were to accept, while Sawiris would keep 5 percent.
The price offered by France Telecom represents a 33 percent premium over the ECMS closing price on Thursday of LE 136.37 per share.
It represents a discount of nearly 8.7 percent from the initial price set out in Sawiris’ put option that called for France Telecom to pay LE 221.7 per share in September, rising later to LE 248.5 per share.
France Telecom had already set aside €1.9 billion in its accounts in anticipation of buying out Sawiris under the put option, according to analysts.
Mobinil, which is Egypt’s largest telecom company, was the subject of a drawn-own legal fight between Sawiris and France Telecom several years ago that ended in April 2010 with a new shareholders’ agreement.
Under the settlement, Sawiris won put options to eventually exit the company by selling to France Telecom.
For France Telecom, Mobinil is part of its effort to expand its footprint in high-growth emerging markets to offset tough competition in its home market. Egypt, where it competes with Vodafone’s local unit, represents one of France Telecom’s biggest emerging market bets.
The French group has also expanded in about 20 other African and Middle Eastern countries including Tunisia, Morocco, Iraq, Senegal and the Ivory Coast.
Sawiris, at 57 one of Egypt’s richest men, has eased off day-to-day management of his empire after selling assets including Italian operator Wind and his most lucrative business, Algeria’s Djezzy, to Vimpelcom in a deal worth $6 billion.
Much of his time is now spent in politics — he has been one of Cairo’s most outspoken business personalities on issues such as political reform and media freedoms since the revolution.
Last year he co-founded the liberal Free Egyptians party which took on the powerful Muslim Brotherhood in a parliamentary election.
But Sawiris isn’t totally out of the deals game: in early February, he told Reuters he would consider buying established telecoms businesses or network operating licenses in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Sawiris and Austrian investor Ronny Pecik have built a stake of 20.1 percent in Telekom Austria via shares and options, and Sawiris recently lost out on bidding for France Telecom’s Swiss business, a deal won by private equity firm Apax.
Shares in France Telecom were up 0. 2 percent to €11.28 at 1126 GMT, while the French blue-chip index was up 0.5 percent.
Shares in ECMS and Sawiris’ holding OTMT opened slightly higher when they recommenced trading on Monday after being suspended on Sunday in anticipation of a Mobinil announcement.
ECMS was up 1.1 percent to LE 137.89 per share at 1128 GMT, while OTMT shares were up 0.7 percent to LE 1.44 per share.