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TalkTalk broadband takeover hopes dashed as cost-of-living pressure mounts

TalkTalk
TalkTalk

Sir Charles Dunstone’s hopes of a lucrative sale of the broadband provider TalkTalk to Virgin Media O2 have been dashed, after market and regulatory uncertainties forced a rethink.

The billionaire entrepreneur, who spun TalkTalk off from Carphone Warehouse in 2010, has been in months of discussions with its bigger rival about a deal.

However, the two sides are now shifting focus with debt markets effectively closed by economic turmoil and no clarity over how the leaderless Competition and Markets Authority would view a combination of broadband rivals.

TalkTalk is now in detailed talks with BT’s infrastructure arm Openreach about a deal to move its four million customers onto its new faster and more reliable full-fibre network in the coming years. An agreement would undermine the main attraction of a takeover for Virgin Media O2, which would have made savings by transferring TalkTalk’s customers onto its own cable network.

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Strategic discussions between TalkTalk and Virgin Media O2 continue, however. They include the possibility that some TalkTalk customers could be moved to the Virgin Media O2 network under a wholesale agreement.

TalkTalk has been slow to make the shift to full fibre, relative to its major rivals, in part because it offers resellers lower profit margins than older broadband technology, to encourage investment in infrastructure.

Its finances are already under heavy pressure from a £1.1bn debt burden that has prompted lenders to impose stricter covenants and its auditor to issue a warning about its accounting. The cost-of-living crisis is piling on more challenges, and as the budget operator in the market TalkTalk is especially exposed to stretched household finances.

Sir charles dunstone - David M. Benett/ Getty Images Contributor
Sir charles dunstone - David M. Benett/ Getty Images Contributor

Sir Charles spun the business off from Carphone Warehouse in 2010 and took it private last year alongside Toscafund.

It had been claimed that a sale of TalkTalk could attract bids of as much as £3bn including debt, although the figure drew scepticism from City analysts familiar with the company’s finances. Any breach of lending covenants could require Sir Charles and Toscafund to inject more equity to stabilise its balance sheet.

A full-fibre deal with BT would raise questions over TalkTalk’s existing relationship with Cityfibre, an infrastructure challenger backed by Goldman Sachs and Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund.

It is investing heavily in building new networks but will require large scale broadband retailers to sign up homes and businesses to become sustainable. Cityfibre has previously alleged that the terms offered by Openreach to secure resellers are anti-competitive, although a High Court claim failed on a technicality.

Openreach is also seeking a major full-fibre commitment from Sky as part of industry-wide discussions codenamed "Equinox 2". An agreement would remove the threat to BT that Sky might move millions of broadband customers onto Virgin Media O2's network.

TalkTalk, BT and Virgin Media O2 declined to comment.