Advertisement
Advertisement
Li Ka-shing
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Li Ka-shing at the annual results announcements for CK Hutchison Holdings and Cheung Kong Property last month. Photo: Sam Tsang

EU regulators to block Telefonica’s sale of O2 UK to Li Ka-shing’s Hutchison, say sources

Li Ka-shing

European Union competition regulators will veto CK Hutchison Holdings’ £10.3 billion (HK$115.8 billion) deal to buy O2 UK from Spanish group Telefonica to become Britain’s biggest mobile network operator, two sources said on Monday.

Hutchison, controlled by Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing, had always faced an uphill battle getting EU clearance for the deal because merging O2 with its own Three UK would reduce the number of rival mobile network operators in Britain to three.

It will be the first time that European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager has expressly rejected such a deal, although Scandinavian groups Teliasonera and Telenor abandoned plans to merge their Danish mobile subsidiaries in September after Vestager said she wanted four network operators in that market.

The European Commission will this week seek the approval from national competition regulators for its decision to reject the Hutchison deal, the sources said. Such a move is usually a formality.

Commission spokesman Ricardo Cardoso, Hutchison and Telefonica declined to comment. The EU watchdog has set a May 19 deadline for its decision.

A package of concessions designed to boost smaller rivals failed to address the commission’s belief that the merger could lead to less competition and higher prices in Britain, the sources said.

Bowing to the commission’s demand to create a fourth network operator also proved impossible as it failed to find a buyer for either O2 or its own UK mobile subsidiary Three. Last week, sources said Hutchison had declined to offer fresh concessions.

Hutchison will be hoping that the commission will not come to a similar conclusion in its investigation into its propsed merger in Italy of 3 Italia with Vimpelcom’s Wind, a deal which analysts say could be equally challenging to get past the regulators, since once again it would reduce national market rivalry to just three network operators.

Post