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Vodafone in gear for $10bn Kabel takeover

Frankfurt - Vodafone has secured enough shares in Kabel Deutschland for its €7.7bn ($10bn) offer for Germany's largest cable company to succeed, Vodafone said on Thursday.

"The 75% minimum acceptance condition has been met," Vodafone said in a statement on Thursday, adding that it would publish details on Monday of the number of shares tendered.

Vodafone's €87.00 per share offer for Kabel Deutschland, which includes a €2.50 dividend payment, ended on September 11.

The British company, which this month agreed the sale of its stake in US operator Verizon Wireless for $130bn, wants to buy Kabel Deutschland to offer more television and fixed-line services in Germany, its largest European mobile market.

Vodafone said Kabel Deutschland shareholders who had not accepted the offer yet may be given an additional chance to do so between September 17 and September 30.

It also said the deal still needed regulatory clearance from the European Commission, with the completion of a first review expected by September 20.

Stealing A march

So-called "quad-play" services offering TV, broadband, mobile and fixed-line telephony have caught on rapidly in markets such as France and Spain, but the largely fragmented German cable market is still some way behind.

This means a deal for the cable company could enable Vodafone to steal a march on rivals such as Liberty's Unity Media and Deutsche Telekom.

With consumers wanting to watch TV and video on an array of devices, cable assets have become more attractive as they can provide internet services at speeds often five times faster than competing services from traditional telecom companies.

Vodafone has said it expected synergies from the deal to exceed €300m a year before integration costs, by the fourth full year following completion.

It also sees potential for revenue synergies of €1.5bn from cross-selling products and improved customer loyalty.

The deal values Kabel Deutschland at 12 times enterprise value against 2013 core earnings, a 35% premium to the sector. However, this falls to 8.5 times when taking into consideration the synergies Vodafone expects to extract, analysts have said.

The high price reflects the desire of the world's second-largest mobile operator to adapt in its core market of Europe, where increasing regulation and recession have hit revenue and forced it to write down the value of its assets.


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