Quantcast
Telecom Italia considering options for cloud, undersea cable businesses – Metro US

Telecom Italia considering options for cloud, undersea cable businesses

FILE PHOTO: Telecom Italia’s logo for the TIM brand is
FILE PHOTO: Telecom Italia’s logo for the TIM brand is seen on building roof downtown Milan

MILAN (Reuters) -Telecom Italia may seek investors for its cloud and wholesale undersea cable businesses as it looks to extract value from its assets, Chief Executive Luigi Gubitosi said on Wednesday.

Like other European rivals, Italy’s biggest phone group has been facing growth issues as the pandemic compounds the long-standing challenge of tougher competition on its home turf.

Last week, it pushed back a goal to stabilise core profits this year, citing higher costs linked to the start up of the DAZN deal, while confirming the target of stabilising domestic revenue.

Speaking to analysts after second quarter results, Gubitosi said TIM would press ahead with plans to extract full value from its network assets.

TIM, whose main investors are French media group Vivendi and Italian state lender CDP, sold a stake in its last-mile grid to U.S. fund KKR last year to help cut its debt pile.

Gubitosi said TIM would assess options for both its cloud firm Noovle, which has a strategic partnership with Google, and its international wholesale unit Sparkle, including potential alliances and new investors.

“At the end of 2021, I think both companies will be in a position to assess what the next step for growth is,” he said, adding the group remained keen to talk with CDP over a potential tie-up with state-backed rival fiber optic operator Open Fiber.

Gubitosi welcomed a decision by Italy’s competition watchdog to accept amendments to a deal between TIM and DAZN that would avert precautionary measures being imposed on their technical and distribution partnership.

The proposed changes and measures, including a pledge to make TIM’s pay-TV offer with the sports streaming service available to clients of other telecoms operators from Aug. 1, would prevent irreparable damage to competition ahead of the start of Italy’s top-flight Serie A soccer season.

TIM shares were up 0.3% by 1500 GMT, against a 0.6% rise of Italy’s blue chip index.

(Reporting by Elvira Pollina; Editing by Jason Neely, Kim Coghill and Mike Harrison)