PARIS, Dec 6 (Reuters) - Orange, France's largest
telecoms operator, and Britain's Vodafone discussed a
merger of equals between mid-2020 and early 2021 but then
abandoned the project due to French opposition, BFM TV reported,
quoting sources.
The French state, which owns 23% of Orange, was wary of
losing some control and seeing the headquarters of the new
company move to London, BFM said, adding that the two firms
might still be discussing a smaller scale alliance.
Orange declined to comment on the report. Vodafone and the
French Finance Ministry did not immediately respond to requests
for comment.
A merger between Orange and Vodafone would have created
Europe's biggest telecom operator with 85 billion euros ($96
billion) of revenues, BFM said.
Martin Vial, head of the French state shareholding agency
APE, said this year that France could make changes to its stake
in telecoms company Orange in the medium term.
Orange finance chief Ramon Fernandez told the Morgan Stanley
TMT conference last month that France would "inevitably" see the
number of telecom operators fall from four to three, adding that
recent take-private deals by two of them, Iliad and Altice,
could improve conditions for a merger.
($1 = 0.8857 euros)
(Reporting by Gwenaelle Barzic, Writing by Benoit Van
Overstraeten; Editing by Edmund Blair)