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To: Jiahao Xiao who wrote (64)5/4/1999 4:12:00 PM
From: Luce Wildebeest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 79
 
LONDON (Reuters) - A group of fund managers
claiming to represent about 25 percent of Telecom
Italia saving shares confirmed Tuesday newspaper
reports they will seek a separate vote of approval on
any merger.
In a letter sent Monday to Telecom Italia Chief
Executive Franco Bernabe and obtained by Reuters,
the group -- including Soros Fund Management -- said
they would use "all legal means'' to protect
shareholders' rights.
Both Italia's planned $81 billion merger with
Deutsche Telekom and a hostile $65 billion bid from
Olivetti were not acceptable to saving share holders,
Chris Hohn, of letter signatory Perry Capital told
Reuters.
"I think we are united in a view that all current
proposals are completely unacceptable,'' Hohn said.
The letter was signed by Perry, Soros Fund
Management, U.S. fund TIAA CREF, Capital Group
International and Newman Ragazzi, which together
own about 15 percent of Telecom Italia saving shares,
a subgroup that earns higher dividends than ordinary
shares but has limited voting rights.
The fund group said it also had the support of an
additional 10 percent of saving shareholders, including
Jardine Fleming Asset Management and Franklin
Mutual Advisors.
Olivetti's bid includes a potential buyout of a
percentage of Telecom Italia saving shares, while the
deal with Deutsche Telecom accepted by Italia would
convert saving shareholders to common stock in the
new company at a rate of 5.6 to 1.
The group maintains that Italian civil and financial
law provides holders of special shares with the right to
vote on mergers that affect their rights.
"We believe there has been a significant amount of
misinformation and omission about the powerful rights
of saving shareholders to block any merger of Telecom
Italia,'' the letter said.
It said that any merger would require the ''approval
at a special shareholders meeting of a majority of the
saving shareholders present.''
The group also called on Italian regulator Consob
to make a disclosure ''clarifying saving shareholder
rights.''
Perry Capital's Hohn said that support for the
group's position among other shareholders was
growing.
"We're getting calls in from people we have never
heard of who own between $200-$500 million of
(saving shares),'' he said. "I imagine that once people
do their own legal checking that we will have every
single saving shareholder.''