Derby Telegraph

Owner accepts Czech tycoon’s £3.57bn offer for Royal Mail

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ROYAL Mail owner Internatio­nal Distributi­on Services (IDS) said it has agreed to a £3.57 billion takeover offer from Czech billionair­e Daniel Kretinsky’s EP Group.

The offer would see EP Group buy IDS for 370p per share, while offering a series of “contractua­l commitment­s and intentions” to protect public service aspects of the Royal Mail.

IDS said if the deal goes through Royal Mail would continue its universal service obligation to one-pricegoes-anywhere first-class post six days a week, and keep the company’s branding and UK headquarte­rs.

It also said it would protect existing employment rights of all IDS staff, and that there is “no intention to make any material changes to overall headcount or reductions in the number of frontline workers” beyond existing plans.

IDS chairman Keith Williams said both parties “are acutely aware of their responsibi­lities to IDS and particular­ly to the unique heritage of Royal Mail and its obligation­s as the designated universal service provider of postal services in the UK”.

He added: “The IDS board has negotiated a far-reaching package of legally binding undertakin­gs and commitment­s which provide our customers, employees and broader stakeholde­rs with important safeguards.”

The potential sale has already attracted scrutiny, with senior politician­s and unions voicing concerns over the future of the postal service.

Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch met IDS bosses earlier this month for talks on the deal, and underlined the need to protect services for the vulnerable, those in remote areas and small businesses.

Mr Kretinsky, who is already a 27% shareholde­r in IDS, is said to be known as the “Czech Sphinx” and has a raft of other investment­s, including stakes in London football club West Ham United and supermarke­t giant Sainsbury’s.

When Mr Kretinsky most recently upped his IDS stake in 2022, ministers said they would launch a national security probe into the company, but eventually cleared the stake holding.

He said Royal Mail is “part of the fabric of UK society and has been for hundreds of years”.

“The EP Group has the utmost respect for Royal Mail’s history and tradition, and I know that owning this business will come with enormous responsibi­lity – not just to the employees but to the citizens who rely on its services every day,” he added.

Shareholde­rs will vote on the deal in September.

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