Billionaire Drahi Leaves Creditors Flummoxed With His ‘Bully-Boy’ Moves

Drahi risks burning bridges with creditors, who over decades bankrolled his debt-fueled empire-building, creating one of Europe's most leveraged companies.

Patrick Drahi cobbled together a telecoms and media group with more than $60 billion of debt.

Photographer: Eric Piermont/AFP/Getty Images

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Patrick Drahi was uncharacteristically chatty on that mild March day at the headquarters of his flagship company Altice France in the south of Paris. The tycoon had just agreed to sell his media operations to fellow French billionaire Rodolphe Saadé for €1.55 billion ($1.68 billion), and was bidding adieu to managers and anchors of the news channel BFMTV.

Over bite-sized appetizers and sparkling water in a bright, glass meeting room overlooking a terrace, he told them he decided in July to cash in on the news channel, after Altice co-founder Armando Pereira was arrested in Portugal for alleged corruption. “When you have an apartment, and you realize the bathroom is worth more than the whole apartment, what do you do?” Drahi asked. He went on say that he’s been thinking about his succession and decided to start selling chunks of his empire, including the French media business, because his four kids told him they want to invest in other areas, according to people who were present but didn’t want to be identified describing a private event.