Bharti Airtel to absorb 40m users from Tata
text size

Bharti Airtel to absorb 40m users from Tata

A man packs goods on the back of his bicycle as he stands next to an advertisement for Bharti Airtel in the southern Indian city of Kochi. Bharti Airtel announced on Thursday that it will get Tata Teleservices' airwaves in a
A man packs goods on the back of his bicycle as he stands next to an advertisement for Bharti Airtel in the southern Indian city of Kochi. Bharti Airtel announced on Thursday that it will get Tata Teleservices' airwaves in a "debt-free cash-free" merger.

MUMBAI: Shares of Bharti Airtel Ltd surged the most since in five months on Friday after it announced that it had agreed to absorb Tata Group's mobile-phone business in the latest among mergers shaking up one of the world's most crowded wireless markets.

The stock gained as much as 9.2%, the most intraday since May 10, after India's largest mobile-phone operator said it will get Tata Teleservices' airwaves and 40 million customers in a "debt-free cash-free" merger. The shares were changing hands at 430 rupees (219 baht), up 7.4%, at 1.18pm in Mumbai.

Tata will settle past liabilities to pave the way for Bharti to complete what it described as an effectively merger, according to a statement issued on Thursday. Tata will finalise the structure of the deal with Bharti in the next five weeks, Tata Group chief financial officer Saurabh Agrawal said in an interview on Thursday.

"The consideration we're getting is that instead of closing down the business, we are taking care of every stakeholder," said Mr Agrawal at Tata's Mumbai headquarters. "Frankly, this business should have been restructured a long time back. We lost the industry position a while ago and we never recovered."

The world's second-biggest mobile-phone market has long been ripe for an overhaul with almost a dozen carriers vying for customers with some of the lowest tariffs on the planet. Then Reliance Jio Infocomm, controlled by India's richest man, roiled the industry by jumping into the fray last year with free calls for life and free data for a limited period.

Bharti said it will assume some small liabilities related to spectrum. Tata will retain its stake in Viom Networks, a tower company, and the group is exploring merging its enterprise business with Tata Communications, according to the statement. Parent Tata Sons will repay all the debt that Tata Teleservices has, Mr Agrawal said.

Tata Teleservices was ranked ninth among India's 11 carriers, with a market share of 3.55% as of July, according to the latest data from the nation's telecom regulator. The top three carriers -- Bharti, Vodafone India and Idea Cellular -- control almost 60% of the market. Jio now has about 11% of the market, ranking it fourth.

Jio's entry into the market sparked the latest shakeout. In March, Vodafone and Idea announced that they would merge operations in India to create the nation's largest carrier. In February, Telenor ASA said that it would sell its India unit to current market leader Bharti. Reliance Communications had planned to merge with Aircel but that deal fell apart in early October.

The industry overhaul may be far from over.

"The telecom sector is undergoing a very turbulent and difficult phase," billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla, the patriarch of the group that controls Idea, said in an interview in October. "Probably the fittest three will survive."

The promise of more than a billion customers led Indian companies to flood the wireless industry but as growth slowed, their debt-fuelled expansion began catching up with them. As of March 31, Indian wireless operators had a combined debt of about 4.6 trillion rupees, largely because of aggressive bids for airwaves, according to credit rating agency ICRA.

"We'll take the near term pain. To gulp down the poison. Finish it off and resolve it." said Mr Agrawal. "We are triple A. We act as triple A and we will always be triple A," referring to Tata Sons' credit rating.

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT