By Friedrich Geiger 

FRANKFURT-- Deutsche Telekom AG Chief Executive Timotheus Höttges said Thursday he hasn't received an offer for U.S. subsidiary T-Mobile US Inc. that meet his requirements for a deal after Iliad S.A. of France bid $15 billion for a majority stake in the U.S. cellular carrier.

Mr. Höttges said he is open to a transaction in the U.S. if it is value-accretive, but "at this point in time, we have no offer on the table which increases value more than what we're developing organically." The offer from the upstart French operator, founded by billionaire Xavier Niel, surprised him, he added. Deutsche Telekom has a 67% stake in the U.S. firm.

T-Mobile US, which faces stiff competition from larger carriers in the U.S., had also been in talks about a possible tie-up with Sprint Corp., until Sprint decided this week not to pursue a merger. Dish Network Corp. Chairman Charlie Ergen has also expressed interest in acquiring T-Mobile US.

Mr. Höttges comments, which came as the German telecom operator reported a rise in second-quarter profit, indicate that Iliad would have to improve the terms of its offer to meet his conditions for a deal. Iliad's management hasn't ruled out the possibility of raising the bid. T-Mobile has also called Iliad's $15 billion opening offer inadequate, people familiar with the matter have said.

Iliad entered the French mobile market with cutthroat prices in 2012 and has since grabbed about 12% of the market. Mr. Niel says he sees the same opportunity across the Atlantic, a market five times the size of France's.

Deutsche Telekom net profit jumped a 34% in the second quarter to EUR711 million ($951.5 million), compared with EUR530 million in the same period a year earlier. Revenue slipped 0.3% to EUR15.11 billion. Earnings were boosted by T-Mobile US which became profitable in the second quarter after posting a loss a year earlier. A spectrum swap with Verizon Communications Inc. in the U.S. contributed one-time income of around EUR400 million before tax to Deutsche Telekom's earnings.

Mr. Höttges said he sees no urgency for a deal involving the U.S. unit. "T-Mobile US is developing very well...and has won a strong position in the U.S. mobile communications market," he said.

However, the smallest of the U.S.'s four major carriers faces big outlays of cash at looming spectrum auctions, which are expected to cost carriers billions of dollars, if it is to remain competitive. The two market leaders, AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc., have superior financial muscle, said Mr. Höttges in view of T-Mobile's position.

"I demand that, in order to ensure the long-term competitiveness of the smaller competitors, we get concessions at the low band auction..., so that we don't have to compete with the big treasuries of AT&T and Verizon," he said.

Proceeds from a sale of the U.S. unit would help Deutsche Telekom fund billions of euros in expenses to upgrade its domestic network and fend off competition from Vodafone Group PLC and Liberty Global PLC, which operate television cable networks in Germany.

Deutsche Telekom boosted its domestic investment spending by around 60% to more than EUR1 billion in the second quarter.

Network upgrading helped the group slow customer losses at its German fixed-network business to its lowest level in at least 10 years, said the management. The domestic mobile business was largely stable in the second quarter. In the rest of Europe, revenue declined but cost-cuts mitigated the impact on earnings. Business with corporate customers was hindered by a restructuring.

For the full year, the company confirmed its forecast and continues to predict adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization of around EUR17.6 billion.

Write to Friedrich Geiger at friedrich.geiger@wsj.com

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