On-Prem

Networks

Brit competition regulator will make or break Vodafone and Three union

Interested parties invited to speak now or forever hold your peace


Britain's Competition and Markets Authority is asking the mobile industry for feedback on Vodafone's local merger with Three to determine if the agreement could negatively impact rivals, customers, or both.

The tie-up was confirmed in June, when the duo pledged to pour £11 billion ($13.9 billion) into the country's 5G infrastructure in the following decade.

The CMA, which is taking a far more active roles in mergers and acquisitions since Brexit, today asked interested parties to give their opinion of the Vodafone-Three fusion. The invitation close on November 1.

"Millions of consumers and businesses in the UK rely on Vodafone's and Three's mobile networks to stay connected," said Sarah Cardell, chief executive at the CMA.

"We will be carefully considering how this deal may affect competition in the UK, which could affect the options and prices available to customers. We will also assess how it may affect incentives to invest in the quality of UK mobile networks.

"This is an opportunity for those with an interest in this merger to let us know their views before we launch a full investigation."

Under the terms of the merger, Vodafone would own a 51 percent stake in the resulting company, currently referred to as "MergeCo" until a new brand is decided, should the transaction be approved. It would create the third major telecom operator in Britain, alongside BT and Virgin Media.

When the deal was announced earlier in the summer, Canning Tok, co-managing director at Three parent CK Hutchison, admitted: "Three UK and Vodafone UK currently lack the necessary scale on their own to earn their cost of capital." The combined entity would be better placed to build a "best-in-class 5G network," he said.

The CMA's involvement is "unsurprising," according to tech analyst Paulo Pescatore at PP Foresight. He reiterated earlier comments that the merger will only be cleared when "both parties can demonstrate that this is in the genuine interests for UK plc (the economy, productivity, consumers)."

"Having said this, Ofcom recognizes the challenges of the UK mobile market and need for scale. Convincing the CMA of a failing firm will be the real test. Current investment levels are not sustainable in the longer term."

Kester Mann, director of consumer and connectivity at CCS Insights, told us the CMA's announcement "finally sets the wheels in motion for a lengthy investigation into a merger deal that would permanently reshape the UK mobile market."

"At this early stage, the deal appears poised on a knife edge and is too difficult to call either way. The next 12 months will see passionate lobbying and intensive debate ahead of the crucial decision. A leading factor in the eventual outcome will likely be to what extent the merged company is prepared to offer remedies and concessions. Should it be blocked, Vodafone and Three would be left with highly uncertain futures in the competitive UK market," he added. ®

Send us news
42 Comments

Vodafone to fast-track Arm-based OpenRAN for mobile networks

Working with Ampere and others in modular approach

Ericsson pins hopes on cloudy future after Q3 lightens wallets

Watch out, 'macroeconomic uncertainty' is at it again as network operators slow deployments

APNIC close to completing delegation of its final /8 IPv4 block

Asian internet registry still has 5M 32-bit addresses from different sources – or practically infinite IPv6s

Net neutrality meets opposition in US, while Europe mulls charges for Big Tech

Republican senators claim move will never survive judges' scrutiny

Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites prepare for testing after one late Prime delivery

If all goes well, production to start 'before the end of the year'

Two Project Kuiper prototype satellites finally reach orbit

Hey – gotta start somewhere

Airwave a 'license to print money' on legacy blue-light comms contract

Profits and revenue increase for Motorola subsidiary challenging regulator price cap ruling

Vodafone claims first space-based 5G phone call – no modifications needed

The roaming charges must be out of this world

Israel and Italy have cheapest mobile data out of 237 countries

Some in globe pay just $0.02 per GB, others rinsed for $43.75

Cloudflare loosens AI from the network edge using GPU-accelerated Workers

Isn't that how Skynet took over?

iPhone 15 is too hot to handle – and not in any good way

Influencers offer smouldering looks, analysts wonder if TSMC-fabbed silicon can take the heat

Bermuda, your data, Google's gonna take your US data

Search giant's latest subsea cable will feed your YouTube addiction