Shares of Deutsche Telekom experienced a sharp decline of up to 3.9% on Thursday following a Wall Street Journal report indicating the German telecommunications giant is aggressively moving forward with plans to fully merge with T-Mobile US (TMUS).
Deutsche Telekom AG, DTEGY
The intraday selloff represented the most significant single-day percentage decline for DTEGY since April 22, when Bloomberg initially disclosed that Deutsche Telekom was examining potential merger frameworks with its American subsidiary. On that occasion, the stock tumbled 4.8%.
Thursday’s reporting provides additional clarity to what has been an evolving narrative. According to the Journal, Deutsche Telekom CEO Tim Höttges is personally spearheading efforts to complete the deal.
T-Mobile US represents the cornerstone of Deutsche Telekom’s corporate strategy. The American operation generates nearly two-thirds of the parent company’s consolidated revenue, establishing it as the most critical and valuable asset in the portfolio.
The proposed combination encounters significant pushback from T-Mobile’s minority shareholders. According to reports, these investors harbor concerns because the merger would dilute their holdings with exposure to Deutsche Telekom’s less profitable international business segments — a proposition many view unfavorably.
Securing minority shareholder approval represents just one challenge in a multi-layered approval process.
Deutsche Telekom must also obtain support from the German Federal Government, which maintains a 28% equity stake in the telecommunications provider. Following that, the transaction would enter a regulatory approval phase potentially involving national security assessments in both Germany and the United States.
Höttges, whose planned departure is scheduled for the end of 2028, aims to finalize the merger and install a successor before his tenure concludes.
This timeline creates considerable pressure. The CEO has approximately two and a half years remaining to navigate an extraordinarily complicated international merger transaction.
The journey has encountered obstacles. T-Mobile’s connections to the Trump administration generated political controversy in Germany. Additionally, the company’s decision to eliminate its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs last year triggered thousands of protest emails from German investors, the Journal reported.
T-Mobile US shares demonstrated minimal movement, gaining approximately 0.34% to 0.38% during Thursday’s session, indicating investors are not yet factoring in a definitive transaction.
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