Telkom and Rain break off merger talks

Telkom’s share price rises almost 9% by Wednesday afternoon.
Telkom and Rain break off merger talks

Network operators Telkom and Rain have decided to end talks that would have seen the two companies merge, following an agreement that a suitable deal was not viable.

In a statement on Wednesday, ‘big-six’ network provider Telkom, said “the parties have decided that a suitable transaction is not possible at this time”, following initial discussions to acquire Rain.

Rain, which makes up part of the Patrice Motsepe-backed African Rainbow Capital stable, believed its tie-up with Telkom would have formed a powerful 5G entity to compete with rivals in the mobile operator market

The collapsed talks come just over three months after Telkom formally received a non-binding proposal from Rain, whereby it would potentially be acquired by Telkom for newly-issued shares in the partially state-owned firm.

“Telkom continues to execute its strategy to unlock value for shareholders and will provide an update on progress in this regard in due course,” Telkom said.

Before data-only provider Rain approached Telkom to initiate merger talks, Telkom had been MTN’s takeover target, which would have seen South Africa’s second- and third-largest operators integrate, leading to the formation of the country’s biggest mobile phone operator.

However, MTN walked away from early-stage discussions with Telkom in October, saying Telkom could not provide it with exclusivity assurances and that there had not been a binding offer by Telkom’s board of directors.

By late afternoon, Telkom’s share price had soared 8.71% to trade at R35.20.