Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi has abandoned a project backed by his predecessor to create a single national fiber network controlled by Telecom Italia SpA, in a bid to boost competition among carriers and employ a wider set of technologies including 5G services.
The government’s project to improve the country’s digital services will be structured around competitive tenders in multiple areas and will be designed to grant wholesale access to third parties, a senior government official said.
Italy’s recovery plan earmarks 6.7 billion euros ($8 billion) to boost investment in ultra-wide broadband to achieve universal coverage across the entire country, the official added, asking not be named discussing the plan.
Following a European Union request for the government to foster competition as it allocates funds from the bloc’s recovery plan, Rome will no longer support Telecom Italia’s plan to combine its landline assets with networks run by state-owned rival Open Fiber SpA, said several people familiar with the matter. The Telecom Italia proposal would have kept the combined new operator under the ex-monopolist’s control.
No Reversal
The Draghi government is intent on halting any project that would reverse two decades of deregulation and in effect allow Telecom Italia to kill off a competitor, albeit one under state control, the people said, asking not to be named discussing confidential deliberations. The government’s plan would represent opposition to a return to a monopoly in the phone industry, the people said.
Telecom Italia shares tumbled as much as 9.2%, and traded down 6.3% at 1:52 p.m. in Milan. The government coming out against the network plan would significantly damage hopes for a merger of the company’s FiberCop network with Open Fiber, Berenberg analyst Carl Murdock-Smith wrote in a note.
What Bloomberg Intelligence Says: |
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The Italian government’s decision, reported by Bloomberg News, to withdraw support for the creation of a single fiber network in Italy via a merger of Open Fiber and Telecom Italia’s fixed grid would remove a key catalyst for Telecom Italia’s prospects. A deal would have offered substantial synergies, in the low- to mid-billion-euro range in net present value, and would create a level playing field for retail competition. Without a deal, Telecom Italia not only faces infrastructure rivalry, bringing capital-spending risks, but also higher retail competition in Italy’s crowded broadband market, with an upcoming launch by Iliad. -- Erhan Gurses, BI telecoms analyst |
Documentation on the recovery plan sent by Draghi’s government to the EU backs the Italian position, daily la Repubblica reported Thursday.
Telecom said in a statement late Thursday that such an interpretation of Italy’s recovery plan is “entirely inappropriate and unsubstantiated,” and it will file a complaint with market regulator Consob.
Any deal is “exclusively subject to the will of the companies involved and their shareholders,” the company added.
Innovation Minister
Innovation Minister Vittorio Colao, a former chief executive officer at wireless carrier Vodafone Group PLC, also told Repubblica recently the government is committed to assuring “equity of access to fast internet connections and fair and open competition.” The state should be “an arbiter rather than a player” in the process, he said.
The government aims to adopt a technology-neutral approach, encompassing fiber deployment as well as fixed wireless access, or FWA, and 5G, the government official said, asking not to be named discussing confidential matters.
Italy has also moved to tighten its grip over Open Fiber, originally a joint venture between Enel SpA, the country’s biggest utility, and state-backed lender Cassa Depositi e Prestiti SpA.
Cassa Depositi last week gained control of Open Fiber by buying an additional 10% from Enel, and now plans to accelerate its fiber roll-out and inject about 250 million euros ($300 million) into the company through a capital increase, according to people familiar with the matter.
Representatives for the government, Telecom Italia and Open Fiber earlier declined to comment for this story.
Rural Areas
The revised plan would see Open Fiber accelerate its internet services roll-out in rural areas, with the government encouraging competition for services in urban regions. Rome would also look to foster co-investment projects relying not just on fiber but also on ultra-fast mobile services such as 5G, the people said.
The government acknowledged recently that Italy lags behind European peers in “digital adoption and technological innovation,” particularly in rural areas, while the country ranks near the bottom among EU states in adopting new technologies.
“To boost the country’s broadband roll-out, the European Commission could leverage on wholesale-only carriers such as Open Fiber or Telecom Italia’s FiberCop, as they provide ultra-broadband services for all players granting equal access,” said Laura Rovizzi, chief executive at Open Gate Italia, a Rome-based strategy and regulation consultant that specializes in telecommunications. A clear commitment to an open playing field for digital services could also ease access to recovery plan funds, she said.
Conte Plan
Telecom Italia Chief Executive Officer Luigi Gubitosi, with the backing of the previous government led by Giuseppe Conte, had pushed for an Open Fiber deal for months, insisting his company wouldn’t cede control of the proposed merged network.
That plan was the result of long negotiations between the Conte government, Telecom Italia and Cassa Depositi, which owns nearly 10% of Telecom Italia and controls Open Fiber. Conte resigned in late January and was replaced by Draghi the following month.
Telecom Italia last year agreed to sell 37.5% of its land-line cables running from the street to premises -- the so-called secondary network -- to the infrastructure unit of investment firm KKR & Co. for 1.8 billion euros. Swisscom AG’s Fastweb SpA will hold 4.5% of the new network company, dubbed FiberCop, which will be a direct competitor of Open Fiber.
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