In May, the government approved the sale of Chelsea Football Club, also owned by Abramovich, to a US consortium spearheaded by US financier Todd Boehly.
Truphone — which sells embedded Sim cards used by Apple and several major mobile network operators — was valued at £410m in 2020 and has received more than £300m in investment from Abramovich and his two Russian business partners, petrochemicals tycoons Alexander Abramov and Alexander Frolov.
The group, which has recorded 15 consecutive years of losses, including £16m in 2020, also sells contracts to corporate customers including banks that want a secure network and to avoid roaming charges.
The future of the company was thrown into doubt after Abramovich, who owned a 23 per cent stake in the company, had sanctions imposed by UK and European authorities. In November OFSI became involved in the sale process after the company’s other major owners, Abramov and Frolov, were added to the UK’s sanctions list for their “involvement in sectors of major significance to Putin’s military machine”.
Truphone was bought by TP Global Operations, a new vehicle owned by Koç and Koussios, on Tuesday, and the two investors have committed to invest up to £15m in the company in the next few years. The new owners want to expand Truphone’s business offering compliance solutions for recording phone and text messages for banks as well as its eSIM technology.
“Truphone hasn’t been profitable until now so there’s a certain amount of cash we need to [invest] to make it sustainable,” Koç said, arguing that moving the company out of sanctioned individuals’ hands would create value in itself because several clients have just been waiting for new ownership to initiate business.
Last month, Alexander Straub, a German entrepreneur who was involved in setting up Truphone in 2006 and had concerns about the direction of the company under the current bidders, submitted an eleventh-hour offer to buy it back for US$250m worth of shares in a special purpose acquisition company that listed in New York last year.
Written by: Anna Gross
© Financial Times