| Deutsche Telekom, Telecom Italia Reached Merger Accord
 
 April 20, 1999
 
 Xinhua via NewsEdge Corporation : BONN (April 19) XINHUA - One of the world's
 largest telecommunications groups valued at some 200 billion U.S. dollars will be
 created after the German giant Deutsche Telekom merges with Telecom Italia as
 they have agreed.
 
 The two companies will announce details of the agreement at a press conference
 in London Tuesday, the DPA news agency reported Monday. Deutsche Telekom
 neither confirmed nor denied the information.
 
 The development follows days of intense speculation and reports about their
 imminent merger to create a concern with a yearly turnover of around 64 billion
 dollars and a work force of about 350,000 employees.
 
 Deutsche Telekom just a week ago dismissed a Financial Times report about the
 merger as "speculation," saying it would not participate in such speculation.
 
 At the same time, however, the German company while reporting its first-quarter
 results also announced plans for a second emission of shares which could
 generate as much as 12 billion dollars in revenues.
 
 The company said the share issue, to be effected by the summer, would be used
 to bolster its finances and to help in making acquisitions, a point which only
 further fueled the speculation about its aims towards Telecom Italia.
 
 Over the weekend, German Finance Minister Hans Eichel and his Italian
 counterpart, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, respectively gave their blessing to the merger
 at an informal European Union finance ministers meeting, and said they would
 not stand against it.
 
 The two companies Sunday formally confirmed their talks, which had been
 believed to involve the two sides' top executives, Ron Sommer of Deutsche
 Telekom and Franco Bernabe of Telecom Italia.
 
 The German business daily Handelsblatt reported earlier Monday that the two
 companies were intending a merger after the model of the mega-fusion last year
 between Daimler and Chrysler, whereby the shares of both would be exchanged
 in lieu of a single new share.
 
 Amid the developments, France Telecom, one of Deutsche Telekom's most
 important international partners, warned Monday against the merger with
 Telecom Italia, saying it viewed such a merger as incompatible with Deutsche
 Telekom's efforts towards a "strategic turnaround."
 
 The French and German companies are involved together with the U.S. telephone
 company Sprint in a joint venture called Global One, which has reportedly run
 into problems with larger-than-anticipated losses.
 
 [Copyright 1999, Comtex]
 
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