Business Standard

Investors put $1.25bn in Air tel Africa

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

Bharti Airtel announced it was getting six marquee investors to put a total of $1.25 billion in its fully-owned subsidiary, Airtel Africa. This will be through the issuance of fresh equity. The African company will float an IPO on an internatio­nal stock exchange soon, which has not been chosen yet.

The deal will help the telecom major to cut its consolidat­ed debt by 8 per cent, says ICICI Securities. It will also help reduce its annual interest outgo, estimated by analysts at ~10 billion. All these are seen as strengthen­ing the firm to take on rival Reliance Jio.

The market gave the stock a big thumbs-up; the scrip closed 9 per cent higher, at ~311.55.

The six investors include Warburg Pincus, Temasek, Singtel, and SoftBank Internatio­nal. With this deal, Bharti Airtel’s stake in the company will go down from 100 per cent to 71 per cent. Bharti's consolidat­ed debt is $15 billion (~1.1 trillion), of which $5 billion is on the books of the Africa operations.

With the deal, its ratio of net debt to operating earnings (Ebitda) will fall from 3.6 to 3.3; it also set a floor price for the future IPO. Even assuming it offers a conservati­ve 10 per cent stake in the company through the IPO, say analysts, this should reduce the debt further by around $900 million (~66 billion), based on its current enterprise value after the deal of $9.4 billion, as estimated by Credit Suisse.

According to ICICI Securities, the company has a refinance obligation of ~260 billion in 2018-19, of which it refinanced ~84 billion through euro bonds this month. With the extra debt reduction from the Africa deal, it says, the refinance obligation­s will significan­tly reduce.

Raghunath Mandava, the Africa managing director for Bharti, said: “This primary equity issuance clearly underlines the confidence of leading global investors in Airtel Africa’s successful business strategy and its potential to sustain growth and profitabil­ity. The transactio­n will help us further deleverage our balance sheet and boost our capacity to upgrade networks, expand coverage in different markets and achieve rapid growth of Airtel Money across our operations."

Airtel has been trying to reduce its debt by issue of equity and by monetising of assets — it needs cash to invest, for maintainin­g the revenue market share against Jio's onslaught. For instance, it recently sold a 20 per cent stake in its direct-to-home business for $350 million. With the proposed merger of tower company Indus Towers with Bharti Infratel, it will have a 3536 per cent stake in the company, which could again be monetised. Analysts say valuation of this entity is around $15 billion, which means Bharti could raise $5.4 billion if it plans to sell the entire stake, though that would be unlikely. It also has the potential to monetise its fibre network to raise cash if required.

Airtel needs to make large investment­s for not only expanding its fourthgene­ration technology (4G) network, where Jio is far ahead. It is required for a fibre-to-home network, where the recent acquisitio­n by Jio of Hathway and Den Networks has given it a huge edge over Airtel. And, to put in money for converting its tower backhaul from microwave to fibre, where again Jio is entrenched. That is why the company is investing $4 billion (~295 billion) this year for capital investment. Analysts estimate it will have to put in a similar amount of cash for the next two years. Analysts are unsure of the impact for its Indian business of the recent deal. Credit Suisse says it continues to remain cautious on this, as there is no let-down in competitiv­e aggression from Jio. Deutsche Bank says the deal is positive for Bharti and Singtel, but Jefferies says challenges in the India business will continue in the near term. Also, the valuation of the Africa business is below their expectatio­n.

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