Business Standard

PE investors okay RCOM tower deal

- KIRAN RATHEE

The deal by Anil Ambani-owned Reliance Communicat­ions to sell its tower assets to Canada's Brookfield Infrastruc­ture is set for quick closure as private equity (PE) investors and hedge fund managers have given their approval to the transactio­n.

The ~11,000-crore deal, which was announced in December, has received almost all approvals. According to sources, PE investors, including NSR Partners, HSBC Daisy Investment­s (Mauritius), George Soros Quantum Funds, Galleon & Drawbridge Towers, and hedge fund managers have given their approvals to Reliance Communicat­ions for the deal. The approvals pave the way for quick closure of the tower deal.

PE investors and hedge fund managers hold a 4.26 per cent stake in Reliance Communicat­ions' tower arm Reliance Infratel. The tower arm stake sale will bring down Reliance Communicat­ions’ debt by ~11,000 crore. When contacted, Reliance Communicat­ions declined to comment on the developmen­t.

The deal has received approvals from the Competitio­n Commission of India, the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the National Stock Exchange, the Bombay Stock Exchange and shareholde­rs. The only approvals left, a source said, were those from the National Company Law Tribunal, which would likely be taken up on June 28, and lenders, for which the formal consent process would begin in the last week of June.

The Union Cabinet is also likely to take up the deal in the next couple of weeks.

According to the deal, Brookfield will pay Reliance Communicat­ions ~11,000 crore in cash upfront for a 51 per cent interest in the tower business. Reliance Communicat­ions will retain a 49 per cent stake that could be monetised later. This will be the largest FDI deal in the infrastruc­ture sector.

The combinatio­n of Reliance Communicat­ions’ wireless business with Aircel is signed and announced. It will reduce Reliance Communicat­ions’ debt by another ~14,000 crore.

To further reduce its ~45,000 crore debt, Reliance Communicat­ions plans to sell real estate to raise another ~10,000 crore. After all these transactio­ns, the company’s debt is likely to be ~10,000 crore.

Reliance Communicat­ions has sought expression­s of interest for the Reliance Centre in Delhi and the DAKC property in Navi Mumbai.

The Reliance Centre, on 4 acres, is valued at ~700-800 crore. The company expects the ready-to-move-in property will draw interest from corporate groups and banks. The Mumbai property is spread over 133 acres and is valued at ~8,000-10,000 crore.

Sources said the sale of the two properties was likely to be completed by the end of 2017. The proceeds from these two transactio­ns will be used to retire debt.

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