- G.Network sold to FitzWalter Capital after lenders trigger sale due to debt and sluggish customer growth
- Move highlights mounting financial strain in UK alternative fibre broadband market
What happened: Lenders pull trigger on sale
UK full-fibre network operator G.Network has been acquired by distressed debt specialist FitzWalter Capital in a transaction driven by the company’s lenders after prolonged financial strain and limited subscriber growth.
Founded in 2016, G.Network built a fibre broadband network spanning roughly 400,000 London homes, yet had attracted only about 25,000 active customers and was carrying an estimated £300 million in net debt at the time of the sale. Previous shareholders included the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) and Cube Infrastructure Managers, while creditors such as NatWest, Investec and Santander are expected to take significant write-downs as a result of the deal.
The sale follows nearly a year in which G.Network sought a buyer without success, as continued infrastructure spending and modest commercial traction strained its balance sheet.
Almost immediately after the acquisition, FitzWalter Capital applied to place G.Network into administration, a move that could mark the first insolvency in the UK’s “altnet” fibre broadband sector in recent years. Alvarez & Marsal has been appointed to manage the administration process while seeking potential buyers and ensuring ongoing service continuity for customers.
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Why it’s important
The rapid sale and subsequent administration filing underline the financial difficulties facing smaller alternative network (“altnet”) operators in the UK. Despite significant investment in fibre infrastructure to challenge incumbents such as BT’s Openreach and Virgin Media O2, many altnets are struggling with high build costs, rising financing expenses and slower-than-expected customer uptake.
This development is widely seen as a bellwether for consolidation in the sector: investors are increasingly sceptical about the standalone viability of heavily indebted regional networks without clear pathways to profitability.
For customers and the broader broadband market, the situation raises questions about future competition and service continuity. While administrators have stressed that services will continue as normal, the longer-term ownership and strategic direction of G.Network remain uncertain.
