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Optus Set To Be Pushed To #3 Slot After TPG Gets Voters Nod To Takeover iiNet

Optus Set To Be Pushed To #3 Slot After TPG Gets Voters Nod To Takeover iiNet

TPG is set to become Australia’s second largest ISP after Telstra after iiNet shareholders have approved a $1.56 billion takeover by the Sydney based Company.

At a shareholder meeting in Perth this morning the TPG

takeover offer won the votes, with 100.6 million in favour and 5.2 million

against, 93% per cent of proxies were in favour of the deal.

The deal went ahead despite several people voicing their

objection to the proposed takeover which will see Optus relegated into the #3

slot in Australia.

TPG will now become a telecommunications powerhouse with 1.7

million broadband subscribers and the power to reshape the Australian internet

market.

This places it behind Telstra’s 3 million accounts and ahead

of Singtel-Optus’ 1.03 million users with M2 Group a distant fourth.

Objections to the takeover came from Merlon Capital’s Hamish

Carlisle and iiNet’s founder Michael Malone along with several major

institutional shareholders including BT Investment Management, the3 original

offer was based on $1.4 billion all-cash bid that was revealed back in March.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission who is

still investigating the deal is set to deliver their verdict on August 20th

with insiders tipping a green light for the deal

Fairfax Media said that once approval is given both parties

will then immediately call for a court hearing to ratify the merger and

finalise the deal.

 IiNet chair Michael

Smith had warned that any move to reject the deal would most likely result in

the company’s share price collapsing.

The Australian newspaper said that the Australian

Competition & Consumer Commission has been studying the impact the deal

could have on the competitive landscape of the $40 billion a year telecoms

sector.

ACCC chairman Rod Sims said he was aware of the criticisms

about the proposed deal from some segments of the telco market, but he said the

ACCC would not rush into handing down its decision before its scheduled release

date.

“We are cognisant of commercial pressures out there, but

this is a big deal and it will permanently change the landscape so we have to

fulfil our duties and assess it probably,” Mr Sims said.

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