AMSTERDAM — America Movil SAB, owned by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, will launch a 7.2 billion euro ($9.6 billion) bid for the part of Dutch telecom company Royal KPN NV it doesn't already own, in a challenge to a rival offer for KPN's prized German mobile group E-Plus.
Movil's 2.40 euros per share bid for KPN announced Friday offers a 20 percent premium on Thursday's closing price, valuing the company's stock at around 10.3 billion euros, and the 70 percent it doesn't already own at 7.2 billion euros.
The news of the approach sent KPN shares 17 percent higher to 2.34 euros in Amsterdam.
The offer price is miles above the 1.60 euros KPN's shares were trading at in mid-July before Movil's arch-rival, Telefonica SA, announced plans to buy E-Plus from KPN for around 8.1 billion euros.
The Telefonica deal was backed by KPN's management, but many analysts believe Slim, the world's richest man according to Forbes magazine, wants E-Plus for himself. E-Plus has a 15 percent stake in the German market that would be near-impossible to build from scratch.
Also, "Slim could be forcing Telefonica to step up and bid for all of KPN, in which case he could exit at a higher price," said analyst Guy Peddy in a note written by a team of analysts from Macquarie Capital.
"At the very least, Telefonica will likely have to significantly raise its bid on E-Plus, which would cause its leverage to balloon" and hurt its ability to invest in Latin America, where it competes directly with America Movil, said Peddy.
Movil said it initially invested in KPN to improve its geographical diversity. Now it wants a controlling stake "to facilitate greater operational cooperation and co-ordination between the two companies."