INDEPENDENT NEWS

Cablegate: Taiwan Telecom: Carlyle Sells Kbro to Taiwan Mobile

Published: Thu 17 Sep 2009 08:29 AM
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TAGS: ETRD ECON ECPS TW
SUBJECT: Taiwan Telecom: Carlyle Sells Kbro to Taiwan Mobile
Reftel: A) Taipei 476; B) Taipei 580
Summary
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1. (SBU) Taiwan Mobile Company announced September 16 it will spend
NTD 32.8 billion (USD one billion) to buy Kbro Company, Taiwan's
second-largest cable TV system operator, from the Carlyle Group.
Taiwan mobile will be the market leader among cable TV system
operators, providing service to one-third of all cable customers in
Taiwan. The National Communications Commission (NCC) and Taiwan
Fair Trade Commission (TFTC) will both review the deal, which is
also subject to the approval of Taiwan Mobile's shareholders. The
sale is unlikely to affect Kbro's ongoing appeals of several
controversial license-renewal decisions by the NCC (ref A). End
summary.
The Deal
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2. (U) Taiwan Mobile, a subsidiary of Taiwan's banking giant the
Fubon Group, is Taiwan's second-largest telecom operator after
state-controlled Chunghwa Telecom. Under the deal, Carlyle will
swap control of Kbro--originally acquired by Carlyle in 2006 for USD
1.5 billion--for USD one billion, with Taiwan Mobile also assuming
USD 800 million in Kbro debt. Carlyle will subsequently hold a 15.5
percent stake in Taiwan Mobile, making Carlyle Taiwan Mobile's
second-largest shareholder after the controlling Tsai family.
Carlyle will also have two seats on Taiwan Mobile's board. By adding
Kbro's 22.4 percent share of the Taiwan cable market to the Taiwan
Mobile-owned Taigu Media Company's 11 percent share, Taiwan Mobile
will become the island's largest cable-television service provider.
NCC, FTC Approval Needed
------------------------
3. (SBU) The NCC and TFTC, however, must first approve the sale. On
September 17, NCC Operational Administration Department Deputy
Director Huang Chin-yi told AIT the NCC will examine whether the
deal violates the Taiwan Cable Television Act, which stipulates a
company may not directly control more than one-third of the total
cable-television market, nor own more than one-fourth of all
television channels. The regulators will also see if the sale is
legal under various laws limiting foreign investors to 49 percent
direct ownership or 60 percent total (direct plus indirect)
ownership of any telecom or cable-television company. Huang noted
that, as a publically-listed company, Taiwan Mobile's total foreign
ownership is already unclear, and adding in an additional 15 percent
ownership by Carlyle will further muddy the waters.
4. (SBU) Huang added the NCC must also decide on how the sale is
affected by provisions of the Telecom Act that forbid public
entities from owning broadcasting enterprises. According to Huang,
if the deal goes through, the Taipei-City-owned Taipei Bank (TB)
will have a small stake in Kbro through the Bank's partial ownership
of Taiwan Mobile. [Note: According to our research, Taipei Bank
sold TCB to the Fubon Financial Holding Company in 2002, and TCB is
therefore now privately-owned. End note.]
5. (SBU) Huang opined that mergers between telecom and broadcasting
enterprises will become more frequent as Taiwan moves toward digital
convergence--the bundling of telephone, cable and Internet service
(ref B)--which he thinks will eventually force the NCC to revise the
laws setting these limits. Huang added even if the NCC
Commissioners approve the deal, the decision might not be speedy,
and the Commissioners could also add unexpected conditions, much as
the Commission has done for recent, controversial cable-television
license renewals (ref A).
6. (SBU) On September 17, former NCC Senior Specialist Yeh
Ning--currently Senior Executive Assistant to
Minister-without-Portfolio Kao Su-po, and rumored to be returning
soon to the NCC as Secretary General--told econoff the NCC and the
Taiwan Fair Trade Commission (TFTC) will, in addition to considering
ownership limits and market share, also consider whether the deal
gives Taiwan Mobile a monopoly or quasi-monopoly position in the
cable-television market. Yeh thinks Taiwan Mobile will be able get
under the one-third cap by selling off one of Kbro's smaller local
operators, but added it is "hard to predict" how the NCC and TFTC
will decide regarding the company's market power. According to media
reports, in order to reduce its market share to under 33.3 percent,
Taiwan Mobile plans to sell off the Hong Shulin Cable TV Company,
which has 56,000 subscribers.
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Won't Affect Pending License Appeals
------------------------------------
7. (SBU) In fall 2008, the NCC added financial conditions to several
of Kbro's cable franchise license renewals. Kbro then made
administrative appeals to the EY Appeals Committee on the issue of
the legality of the NCC's granting of conditional licenses,
requesting that the EY overturn the NCC's decision to grant such
licenses (ref A). The Committee, however, due to the NCC's initial
refusal to cooperate, failed to hand down its ruling within the
legally-mandated five-month period, and the appeals process has
dragged on for nine months. According to Yeh, Taiwan Mobile's
acquisition of Kbro is not likely to affect the timetable or outcome
of the appeals decisions.
Comment
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8. (SBU) The deal, if approved by the NCC and FTC, would position
Taiwan Telecom to challenge Chunghwa Telecom in the commercial race
to implement digital convergence. Approval, however, is not
certain, as the NCC will have difficulty figuring out what amount of
Taiwan Mobile and Kbro are directly or indirectly owned by foreign
investors, as well as the more subjective issue of Taiwan Mobile's
possible monopoly power. End comment.
STANTON
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