Cable & Wireless Communications, the minority shareholder of Telecommunications Services of Trinidad & Tobago (TSTT) has made its clearest statement yet on its desire to take full control of its joint venture in T&T, of which the Government investment vehicle, National Enterprises Ltd, is the majority 51 per cent shareholder.
Speaking in London on Thursday, Cable & Wireless Communications chief financial officer, Tim Pennington, told investment analysts and journalists that the company would like to take full control of its joint venture in T&T and is keen to make a decision soon even if that means it may be forced to sell its 49 per cent stake.
"Our preferred objective is to move to full control, which is what we have done in other markets such as the Maldives, but if we can't do this we will exit it. We'd like to resolve the situation one way or another soon," Pennington told Dow Jones Newswires in an interview at the release of Cable & Wireless Communications six-month financial report.
Cable & Wireless Communications now has businesses in the Caribbean, Panama, Macau and Monaco & Islands but confirmed in September that it was in talks to sell its Monaco & Islands unit to a Bahrain company and last month confirmed that it was discussing the sale of its 51 per cent stake in CTM of Macau to a Chinese company.
Speaking on Thursday, Cable & Wireless Communications chief executive Tony Rice said the company had made progress in reshaping its business in the six-month period. "We have also made progress on our strategy to reshape the business. During the first half we exited our West African enterprise business, and confirmed discussions regarding possible transactions involving our Monaco & Islands and Macau business units," he said.
"These steps are in line with our stated plan to focus our management capability and future investment on the Pan-American region where we have scale, synergy and strong market positions as well as several growth economies." The London-based telecommunications provider is under pressure in The Bahamas to sell down its 51 per cent stake in the monopoly telecommunications providers there.
Pennington said that it is too early to say which option is the likely outcome of the bankers' review. Efforts to contact TSTT chairman Everald Snaggs proved futile as calls to his phone went to voicemail.
Asked which of the two options the Communications Workers Union preferred, control of TSTT by Cable & Wireless or its exit from the company, CWU secretary general, John Julien said: "We have always advocated that TSTT should be fully owned and controlled by the Government and people of T&T. Since 1991, when they got control of 49 per cent of Telco, we had opposed the Government's allocation to them of 49 per cent of TSTT.
"They were never a company that was willing to invest in the infrastructure. They were only interested in creaming off the profits. They wanted control but they wanted the Government to fund the infrastructure. "We are calling on the Government to call the bluff of Cable & Wireless and in any event to control the 49 per cent of TSTT owned by them and engage in meaningful discussions with the union on how that stake should be divested.
"Any other action will see the union and its members vigorously opposing any control of TSTT, except the Government through the people of T&T, who are the real owners of TSTT."