Cellnex to buy Hutchison’s Irish telecoms towers as part of €10bn deal

Deal will see Spanish mast operator add 24,000 tower across Europe to its network

CK Hutchison is the latest mobile network operator to carve out mast infrastructure to cut debt and help pay for costly 5G network upgrades. Photograph: iStock

Cellnex Telecom has agreed to buy CK Hutchison Holdings' European telecommunication towers, including those in the State, for about €10 billion, the biggest-ever acquisition by the Spanish mast operator.

Cellnex will make an initial payment of about €8.6 billion in cash, with the rest paid with new shares, giving CK Hutchison a 5 per cent stake in Cellnex, according to filings from the companies.

CK Hutchison is the latest mobile network operator to carve out mast infrastructure to cut debt and help pay for costly 5G network upgrades. The deal will add about 24,600 new towers to Cellnex’s existing 60,000 sites, with Cellnex committing to invest about €1.4 billion to deploy 5,250 more masts by 2030.

Several large European phone companies are at various stages of setting up their own tower companies to boost their value and draw in new investment. Unlike CK Hutchison, many plan to keep majority control of the infrastructure, which they see as strategically important.

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Aggressively

Cellnex has grown aggressively through acquisitions since its initial public offering five years ago, and the deal marks its entry into three new markets: Austria, Denmark and Sweden. The company’s shares have soared as it drew investors with a steady stream of revenue from long-term contracts with phone companies.

This year alone, Cellnex has announced two acquisitions in Portugal, a deal to enter Poland and a deal in France.

The price agreed with CK Hutchison, including the investment commitment, represents a ratio of 11.75 times the unit's enterprise value to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (ebitda), in line with the valuations of other recent deals, according to Banco Sabadell analyst Andrés Bolumburu.

– Bloomberg