Mediobanca latest investor to exit Telecom Italia pact

News General Italy 16 JUN 2014
Mediobanca latest investor to exit Telecom Italia pact
Italian bank Mediobanca became the latest partner to exit the Telco SpA investment vehicle that runs Telecom Italia via a 22.4 percent stake. It follows insurance company Assicurazioni Generali, which last week confirmed it would also withdraw from the 7-year pact ahead of time. In a statement, Mediobanca said it had exercised its right to ask for a demerger of the Telco shareholders agreement, leaving it with a direct stake in Telecom Italia of 1.6 percent. Mediobanca, which owns 7.3 percent of Telco, formed the group in 2007 with Telefonica, the Italian bank Intesa Sanpaolo and Generali to fend off a takeover bid by Mexican tycoon Carlos Slim. However, an agreement reached among Telco shareholders last September gave them the right to unwind their interests starting this month. Intesa Sanpaolo has also signalled its desire to leave Telco and sell its Telecom Italia shares.

Unwinding the investors’ holdings could take six months and, after the Italian partners have left, Telefonica would directly own around 15 percent of Telecom Italia. Telco was until recently able to appoint a majority of board members but Telecom Italia changed its corporate governance practices earlier this year and appointed a largely independent board under pressure from minority shareholders, above all the Findim group of 5 percent shareholder Marco Fossati. 

The unravelling of the Telco group could open the way to new investors, including so-called activist shareholders, such as US funds BlackRock and Amber Capital, which already hold stakes in Telecom Italia. The Italian operator's chairman Giuseppe Recchi recently told Reuters that such investors were welcome if they took a long-term view, rather than merely seeking quick profits. “There is room for activists in Italy as long as they have constructive proposals,” he said.

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