Vodafone pays Liberty €1bn for Dutch joint venture

UK phone network operator and John Malone’s cable company to combine in the Netherlands

Vodafone investors finally put out of their misery. Photograph: PA Wire
Vodafone investors finally put out of their misery. Photograph: PA Wire

UK phone network operator Vodafone and John Malone's cable company Liberty Global agreed on Monday to combine their operations in the Netherlands for a better footing in the local market.

Vodafone will pay €1 billion in cash to Liberty as part of the agreement to combine its mobile operations with Liberty's fiber broadband network Ziggo in a 50-50 joint venture, the companies said in a statement.

“Together we will be a stronger competitor in the Netherlands”, Vodafone Chief Executive Vittorio Colao said in the statement.

Vodafone will pay €1 billion in cash to Liberty as part of the agreement to combine its mobile operations with Liberty’s fiber broadband network Ziggo in a 50-50 joint venture, the companies said in a statement. (Photograph: Shailesh Andrade/Reuters)
Vodafone will pay €1 billion in cash to Liberty as part of the agreement to combine its mobile operations with Liberty’s fiber broadband network Ziggo in a 50-50 joint venture, the companies said in a statement. (Photograph: Shailesh Andrade/Reuters)

Vodafone has faced increasing pressure in national markets from former national telecoms network monopolies like Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica, KPN and BT , which are able to sell packages of broadband internet, TV and mobile telecoms services. U.S.-based Liberty's Ziggo is the largest cable TV operator in the Netherlands, while Vodafone is the second-biggest mobile network operator, behind KPN. The companies said they would see run-rate savings of 280 million euros per year from the fifth year after the closing of the deal, which they expect towards the end of 2016.

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Earlier this month, Vodafone said it was in limited talks with Liberty about a joint venture in the Netherlands, after the companies could not agree on a tie-up or exchange of assets last year, a deal that could have covered as many as seven European markets. Separately, Liberty also reported total revenue of $4.60 billion in the fourth quarter of 2015, a 0.3 per cent drop from a year earlier. In the Netherlands, the company’s revenue rose 19.6 per cent to $672.6 million from the prior-year quarter.

Reuters