Vodafone chief suggests it could invest in Virgin’s fibre rollout and merge with Three

Returns in sector have halved in past decade and consolidation is needed, says Nick Read

Vodafone Group’s chief executive has struck collaboration deals across all of its territories. Photograph: PA Wire
Vodafone Group’s chief executive has struck collaboration deals across all of its territories. Photograph: PA Wire

The chief executive of Vodafone Group said the European telecommunications industry needed to work together more, suggesting the company could potentially co-invest in rival Virgin’s rollout of fibre and even merge with competitor Three.

“Returns on capital in this sector in Europe have halved over the past decade,” said Nick Read in an interview with the London Times. “The sector is destroying value by duplicating infrastructure. We need to move to a better model.”

The executive, who took over running the telecoms giant in 2018, has struck collaboration deals across all of Vodafone’s territories, including in the UK.

In a sign even bigger ambitions are on the horizon, the executive said he was “supportive of consolidation on the right terms” and revealed he’s been lobbying regulators across Europe for sensible mergers and collaboration deals to help improve returns and encourage wide-scale investment in 5G and fibre.

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For sale

Three, the UK mobile operator, is widely seen as being up for sale. While Mr Read did not disclose if the two companies were in discussions, he explained why “Voda-Three” should be approved by regulators if it were to happen. In 2016, Three was blocked from joining forces with O2 on competition grounds.

“In Europe we have more than 100 operators competing in a very fragmented way – as opposed to the US, which has three scale players,” he said. “China has three; India has three. And in those other markets, you have heavy investment but reasonable returns for shareholders.”

A spokesperson for Vodafone didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.