France Telecom SA (FTE)’s board will meet next week to discuss the consequences of Chief Executive Officer Stephane Richard being charged in a probe dating to when he was chief of staff for then-Finance Minister Christine Lagarde.
A board meeting will take place early next week to discuss whether Richard should remain CEO, Technology Minister Fleur Pellerin said today on RTL radio. Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said in a statement yesterday the board should meet “as soon as possible.”
The charge, related to a dispute between a state-owned bank and a businessman that began in 1993, is a distraction for the Paris-based phone carrier seeking to reverse falling sales. The Orange brand owner is navigating price reductions by rivals and seeking to persuade its own customers to spend more with faster Internet connections.
The case doesn’t affect Richard’s responsibilities at France Telecom, said Jean-Bernard Orsoni, a company spokesman. He declined to comment on the board meeting. “Richard will be back at his desk tomorrow morning,” Orsoni said yesterday.
The state holds a stake of about 27 percent in the former phone monopoly and has three representatives on its board, which is composed of 15 people.
‘Insulting, Grotesque’
Bernard Tapie, a businessman who endorsed Nicolas Sarkozy’s successful presidential effort in 2007 and failed re-election bid in 2012, won a 385 million-euro ($509 million) arbitration award in 2008, ending a dispute with the government over his company’s sale of German sportswear brand Adidas AG (ADS) in 1992. Tapie accused then-state-owned bank Credit Lyonnais of cheating him while handling the sale.
Richard will appeal the judges’ decision to charge him and “views their accusation as insulting and grotesque,” his lawyer, Jean-Etienne Giamarchi, said by telephone.
The 51-year-old Frenchman, who served as Lagarde’s chief of staff between 2007 and 2009, became CEO in 2010. His mandate runs through May. The company’s shares fell as much as 1.7 percent in Paris and were down 1.4 percent to 7.37 euros at 9:07 a.m. France Telecom, the worst performer on France’s leading Cac 40 index in 2012, has dropped almost 12 percent so far this year.
Jean-Francois Rocchi, formerly responsible for liquidating Credit Lyonnais’ debt in his role as president of the Consortium de Realisation, was also charged yesterday in the affair.
Lagarde Questioning
Lagarde, now managing director at the International Monetary Fund, refused to appeal the arbitration decision, saying “a very large majority” of the money would return to the state through the creditors’ claims. She has denied any wrongdoing and was heard last month in a separate investigation led by the Cour de Justice de la Republique, which focuses on ministers’ actions in office. She was named a key witness after two days of questioning.
Lagarde’s lawyer, Yves Repiquet, didn’t return a call for comment on how this might affect the CJR’s investigation.
“It’s too early to say what the consequences, if any, will be for France Telecom,” said Frederic Boulan, a London-based telecommunications analyst for Nomura International Plc. “For now, all that’s clear is the legal process is under way and tomorrow morning will be back to business for Stephane Richard.”
French Industry Minister Arnaud Montebourg on June 6 was cited by French daily newspaper Le Monde as saying Richard should quit his job as chief of France Telecom if charged in the Tapie case. Montebourg later denied making any statement to Le Monde.
Source : bloomberg