By Elvira Pollina
MILAN (Reuters) – Telecom Italia (TIM) General Manager Pietro Labriola will on Tuesday outline to the company’s directors his plan to revamp the former phone monopoly, an alternative strategy to weigh against a takeover approach by U.S. fund KKR.
TIM, which on Friday is expected to appoint Labriola nL8N2TR2DC chief executive, is yet to respond to KKR’s non-binding 10.8 billion euro ($12.28 billion) proposal which is contingent on support from TIM’s board and Italy’s government.
Labriola’s final plan, which the board will examine on March 2 when it meets to discuss full-year results, will provide a benchmark for TIM to evaluate the price of 0.505 euros per share KKR indicated in its Nov. 19 proposal.
Doubts over whether KKR’s tender offer will materialise weighed on TIM shares on Tuesday, which fell 3.2% by late morning, underperforming a 0.8% all-share index drop.
Upcoming presidential nL8N2TS307elections in Rome add to the uncertainty.
Labriola is studying a range of options to KKR’s offer, two sources familiar with the matter have said, looking in particular at splitting TIM’s infrastructure and services assets to try and appease all of the group’s stakeholders.
Under the plan, TIM would spin off its services and network assets in a way that would see each assume a portion of the company’s debt and equity, the sources said.
A veteran TIM executive, Labriola has been running the group’s prized Brazilian operations since 2019.
Tuesday’s informal briefing with directors is seen as a key step for Labriola to secure wide board support on Friday for the CEO role which has been vacant since November when Luigi Gubitosi was ousted after a string of profit warnings.
Competition has hammered debt-laden TIM’s profit margins at a time when it needs to invest to upgrade its network – Italy’s main telecoms infrastructure and a strategic asset for the country.
Labriola’s nomination has been promoted by TIM’s single largest investor Vivendi, which has said that KKR’s offer does not sufficiently value TIM.
He is expected to receive the backing also of state investor CDP, which is TIM’s second largest shareholder with a 10% stake, people close to the matter have said.
CDP, which invested in TIM to oversee its network assets, recently called on TIM to revive a plan to merge them with those of fibre-optic rival Open Fiber, which is 60% owned by CDP.
($1 = 0.8797 euros)
(Reporting by Elvira Pollina; editing by Valentina Za and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)