SoftBank willing to merge with T-mobile, accept Sprint price

epa06213916 (FILE) - A view of a T-Mobile signage in New York, New York, USA, 03 October 2012 (top) and a Sprint logo outside one of the cellular phone company's stores in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, 11 October 2012. US broadcaster CNBC reported 19 September 2017 T-Mobile US Inc. and Sprint Corp may be in merger talks. Earlier in February 2017, Reuters reported Japanese SoftBank was willing to cease control of Sprint in an effort to achieve a merger between the two major carriers, however the move was opposed by US authorities at that time.  EPA-EFE/JUSTIN LANE / ERIK LESSER

Bloomberg

SoftBank Group Corp., the majority owner of Sprint Corp.,
is willing to accept a stock-for-stock merger with T-Mobile
US that values Sprint at or near its current market price, according to people familiar with
the matter.
While the two sides haven’t agreed on an exact value, SoftBank doesn’t expect to receive much of a premium to Sprint’s current share price and may accept a deal that values the fourth-ranked US wireless carrier at about its $34 billion market capitalisation, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussions are private.
Deutsche Telekom AG, the majority owner of third-largest U.S. wireless provider T-Mobile, previously told SoftBank it felt Sprint shares should be valued at a significant discount to their market value, two of the people said. In recent months, Deutsche Telekom has told SoftBank it’s willing to come up on value for Sprint, they said.
At current market values, a stock-for-stock merger would give SoftBank almost 33 percent of the combined company and Deutsche Telekom about 39 percent. Deutsche Telekom plans to consolidate the merged company’s earnings by controlling the board of directors, said one of the people. Other governance arrangements haven’t been finalised, the person said.
Deutsche Telekom is pressing for a deal that would value Sprint below its current market capitalisation, which could leave SoftBank owning 30 percent or less of the combined company, one of the people said.
Another of the people said the terms haven’t been resolved and that SoftBank is unlikely to accept a deal for less than Sprint’s market value. How the two sides will determine market value remains undecided, one of the people said.
It also hasn’t been decided whether Sprint shares or T-Mobile will issue shares to complete the deal, the people said.
Representatives for SoftBank, Sprint and T-Mobile declined
to comment.

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