Dutch telecommunications firm Delta, owned by Swedish private equity investor EQT, said on Monday it planned to spend $2.37bn over the next three years to build out its fibre optic network in the Netherlands, as it aims to compete with national telecoms company KPN NV.

In May, KPN rejected a possible takeover bid by a private equity consortium comprising of EQT and U.S. investment firm KKR .

Delta said in a statement on Monday it expected its fibre customer strength of 1 million fibre at the end of 2020 to 2 million by 2025, after having received $1.72bn in financing from major Dutch banks ABN Amro and ING, as well as Santander and Deutsche Bank.

Join 120,000 other PE professionals and subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Subscribe to our Newsletter to increase your edge. Don’t worry about the news anymore, through our newsletter you’ll receive weekly access to what is happening. Join 120,000 other PE professionals today.

“We want to provide fibre optic connections to 2 million homes and companies, primarily in the smaller towns and cities in the Netherlands,” said Chief Executive Officer Marco Visser.

KPN, the country’s largest telecoms firm, said in November last year that it planned to spend €3.5bn to increase its fibre optic rollout in the Netherlands through 2024. In March, it said pension fund ABP would assist with funding the rollout.

The country’s third-biggest mobile provider, T-Mobile Netherlands, reached a €700m fibre deal with private equity firm KKR in April.

Source: Reuters

Can’t stop reading? Read more