T-Mobile and Orange to merge
Despite rumours of bids from Vodafone and O2, mobile operators T-Mobile and Orange are to join forces.


T-Mobile and Orange have merged to create a new giant in the UK mobile space.
After speculation that Vodafone and O2 were in a bidding battle for the ailing UK arm of Deutsche Telekom, that firm and Orange's parent France Telecom have announced a new joint venture company, bringing the two UK operators together.
According to the pair, the new 50:50 joint venture will become the biggest mobile operator in the UK, with 28.4 million customers - some 37 per cent of the market. The two firms are currently ranked third and fourth. The pair also claimed the new business would have revenues of 7.7 billion.
The deal is expected to be closed by October, and finalised by regulators in early 2010.
The new company will be run by Orange chief executive Tom Alexander, while T-Mobile's leader Richard Moat will become chief operating officer, while the board will be balanced between the two firms.
The firms said they expect cost savings of 3.5 billion from the deal, mostly by consolidating networks, IT and marketing, but also from cutting other costs such as administration, support and customer service - which suggests job cuts. In a conference call, Moat said the tieup would let the firms "optimise the combined workforce" in customer service.
Branding has yet to be decided, and both firms will keep their separate names for 18 months after the deal is finalised, while management looks to come up with a solution.
Get the ITPro daily newsletter
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2025 report - the leading guidance on AI, cybersecurity and other IT challenges as per 700+ senior executives
The deal will see Deutsche Telekom hand over T-Mobile UK, its 50 per cent holding in a 3G network with Hutchinson, and its gross tax losses of 1.5 billion. France Telecom will hand over Orange UK and 1.25 billion in debt "in order to equalise the value of the contributions to the joint venture," the statement said.
The firms also claimed the pairing will better be able to offer new products, as Orange has a broadband business, and better coverage, by combining both firms networks.
Freelance journalist Nicole Kobie first started writing for ITPro in 2007, with bylines in New Scientist, Wired, PC Pro and many more.
Nicole the author of a book about the history of technology, The Long History of the Future.
-
RSAC Conference 2025: The front line of cyber innovation
ITPro Podcast Ransomware, quantum computing, and an unsurprising focus on AI were highlights of this year's event
-
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei thinks we're burying our heads in the sand on AI job losses
News With AI set to hit entry-level jobs especially, some industry execs say clear warning signs are being ignored
-
BT agrees to buy EE for £12.5bn
News BT ends speculation about possible O2 acquisition by confirming plans to buy EE
-
EE to close 78 UK retail stores
News Telecommunications giant to close 10 per cent of stores in areas that are home to several or more retail outlets.
-
Culture Secretary to hold 4G peace talks with telcos
News Minister hopes to break legal deadlock that threatens UK 4G rollout.
-
Everything Everywhere sign five-year NFC deal with MasterCard
News Deal will make mobile payment technology available to 27 million Orange and T-Mobile customers.
-
Sky Broadband blocks The Pirate Bay
News ISP enforces court order to cut access to torrent site for millions of subscribers.
-
Everything Everywhere: UK PLC demands 4G
News Most business leaders think 4G is essential for UK competitiveness, research shows.
-
Vodafone and O2 hit out at 4G consultations
News Mobile operators take issue with Ofcom and brand talks “fundamentally flawed”.
-
Freeview: TV viewers must not pay to fix 4G interference
News Broadcaster calls on mobile operators to pay up for protecting television viewers from 4G interference.