Telstra to Hand A$1.4Bn to Shareholders on Towers Stake Sale -- Update
30 June 2021 - 9:32AM
Dow Jones News
By Stuart Condie
SYDNEY--Telstra Corp. will return about 1.40 billion Australian
dollars (US$1.05 billion) to shareholders after agreeing to sell a
49% stake in its mobile towers business to a consortium including
Australia's sovereign wealth fund.
Australia's largest communications provider on Wednesday said a
consortium comprising Australia's sovereign Future Fund and two
superannuation funds--Commonwealth Superannuation Corporation and
Sunsuper--will acquire the stake in a deal valuing the unit at
A$5.9 billion.
Telstra said it expected net cash proceeds after transaction
costs of A$2.8 billion at completion in the first quarter of fiscal
2022, and that it would return about half to shareholders during
that financial year.
Chief Executive Andrew Penn said Telstra planned to give details
of the mechanism by which it would hand over the cash when it
announces its FY 2021 results in August. He said a share buyback
was among the options.
Mr. Penn said Telstra will invest about A$75 million in its
regional network, with the remaining proceeds directed toward debt
reduction.
Telstra will retain a majority stake in the unit, which is
Australia's largest mobile tower infrastructure provider with
approximately 8,200 towers.
Telstra started preparations for the stake sale in November,
when it split its operations into three businesses, later upping
this to four. The move was also seen by analysts as getting Telstra
ready to bid in the expected privatization of the government-owned
National Broadband Network.
Telstra had planned to seek investment early in its 2022
financial year, which starts on Thursday, but accelerated its plans
following an approach by the consortium.
"They recognized the value of these assets and provided a
compelling rationale to progress the transaction ahead of
schedule," Mr. Penn said.
The InfraCo Towers business will operate under a board chaired
by the Chief Executive of Telstra's infrastructure unit, Brendon
Riley. Jon Lipton, who currently heads the towers business, will be
its Chief Executive.
As well as its mobile towers infrastructure unit, Telstra has a
services unit to hold products and assets such as mobile spectrum.
It has an infrastructure unit for assets including data centers and
said in March it was carving out another for international assets
such as sub-sea cables.
Telstra shares last traded at A$3.60, up 21% since the start of
the calendar year.
Write to Stuart Condie at stuart.condie@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 29, 2021 19:20 ET (23:20 GMT)
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