By Inti Landauro and Andres Gonzalez
MADRID (Reuters) -Spanish telecom big Telefonica (NYSE:)’s board agreed on Saturday to nominate defence firm Indra’s chairman Marc Murtra as its new CEO, changing Chief Government Jose Maria Alvarez-Pallete following a request from state-owned fund SEPI.
Telefonica’s board held a rare assembly on Saturday to resolve to terminate Alvarez-Pallete’s contract and provide his job to Murtra, who accepted it, the corporate stated in a submitting to the inventory market regulator.
The choice nonetheless must be ratified by shareholders, the corporate stated.
State-owned funding fund SEPI had proposed to exchange Alvarez-Pallete, who has led the corporate since 2016, with Murtra, an individual with data of the matter instructed Reuters earlier on Saturday.
The present time period of Alvarez-Pallete was due for renewal this 12 months on the annual normal shareholders assembly often held in April or Might.
Beneath Murtra, Indra, which is 28% owned by the Spanish authorities, has centered on its defence and aerospace enterprise to profit from European international locations’ elevated army budgets following heightening world tensions.
The Spanish authorities purchased a ten% stakeworth about 2.3 billion euros ($2.36 billion) in Telefonica by way of SEPI in Might 2024 to counterbalance the acquisition of an identical stake by Saudi Arabia’s STC in late 2023.
The acquisition gave the federal government a seat on Telefonica’s board.
Given Telefonica is taken into account a defence service supplier and subsequently a strategic firm, the federal government solely permitted the transaction in November 2024 after securing a stake within the telecom firm much like STC.
Over the previous years, Telefonica, like rivals in Europe, has confronted a squeeze on profitability from fierce competitors and the necessity for hefty funding in infrastructure for the 5G next-generation cell know-how.
It has been promoting stakes in additional mature companies comparable to submarine cables or cell masts and smaller operations in Latin America to fund 5G and optic fibre.
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