* Italy has special vetting powers to shield strategic
sectors
* KKR acquiring 37.5% of Telecom Italia's last-mile grid
unit
* Government to hear TIM's views on the matter in early
December
* Unified broadband network top of Rome's agenda
(Adds details on the deal value)
By Giuseppe Fonte and Elvira Pollina
ROME, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Abu Dhabi's biggest sovereign fund
is in talks with U.S. firm KKR to invest in Telecom Italia's
(TIM) TLIT.MI last-mile network in a deal that has drawn
scrutiny from Italy's government, three sources close to the
matter told Reuters.
Rome typically welcomes foreign investments but demands
assurances that investors will follow the country's national
interests. The government has special vetting powers to block
unwanted bids in industries deemed of strategic importance.
TIM agreed in August to sell to KKR a 37.5% stake of a newly
created company, FiberCop, into which it has transferred its
'last-mile' network connecting street cabinets to people's
homes.
KKR now wants to sell up to 30% of the unit that will hold
that stake to Infinity Investments, a subsidiary of the Abu
Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA), as it looks for co-investors
in the Italian deal, the sources said, asking not to be named.
Abu Dhabi would then hold up to 11% of TIM's last-mile grid,
provided the government authorised the deal, which is
potentially worth 500 million-600 million euros ($600
million-$720 million).
"ADIA would be an indirect and passive investor," one of the
sources said.
The Italian Prime Minister's office, TIM, ADIA and KKR all
declined to comment.
Italy's industry ministry has informed the cabinet office of
KKR's plans, and a technical body in charge of scrutinising
foreign investments in strategic Italian assets plans to hear
TIM's views on the matter in early December, the sources added.
Rome this month gave its conditional green light to KKR's
acquisition of the last-mile network stake, demanding that the
firm commit to a government-sponsored plan to create a unified
ultra-fast broadband network. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nS8N2CE00A
The government wants TIM to merge its landline grid, running
from switching centres to households, with rival Open Fiber,
which is jointly controlled by utility Enel ENEI.MI and state
lender Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (CDP).
Infinity Investments and KKR notified the government
following the first clearance to the FiberCop deal, the sources
said.
Co-sharing an investment is a normal practice funds use to
reduce risks.
Australian fund Macquarie is considering the possibility of
syndicating the purchase of a minority stake in Open Fiber from
Enel, people familiar with the matter told Reuters last week.
urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nR1N2HJ023
The move has irked CDP, which does not want potential
co-investors to have governance rights, one of the sources said
on Monday.
($1 = 0.8338 euros)
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Italy govt gives conditional OK to sale of stake in TIM's
last-mile grid to KKR - sources urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nS8N2CE00A
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(Additional reporting by Saeed Azhar and Davide Barbuscia in
Dubai; Editing by Jan Harvey)
((giuseppe.fonte@thomsonreuters.com; +390680307711;))