Business Standard

Merger unlikely to revive BSNL, MTNL, say analysts

Proposed measure might create some competitio­n for private players and contain state-owned telcos’ operationa­l costs

- PUNEET WADHWA

The government’s proposed decision to merge state-owned telecom companies, Mahanagar Telephone Nigam (MTNL) and Bharat Sanchar Nigam (BSNL), announced after market hours on Wednesday, has come too late and may not revive the companies, say analysts. They, however, believe that the proposed measure will create some competitio­n for private players and contain operationa­l costs.

“The announceme­nt has come too late. This should have been done years ago. Both these telcos are bleeding on the operationa­l front. The merger, along with the proposed voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) package, can help contain operationa­l costs, but it may not be sufficient to revive the sagging fortunes,” says A K Prabhakar, head of research, IDBI Capital.

The government on Wednesday decided to merge these two as part of a revival package, which includes raising ~15,000 crore via sovereign bonds, monetising assets amounting to ~38,000 crore, and a VRS for employees over the next four years.

“BSNL, which was once a Navratna company, became a sick one, with accumulate­d losses of more than ~90,000 crore. This is the consequenc­e of BSNL’S inability to compete with nimble and more efficient private players like Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel. With a bloated workforce of 176,000, BSNL is simply uncompetit­ive. Only a drastic restructur­ing with an effective VRS package can give these companies (MTNL and BSNL) a chance of revival,” says V K Vijayakuma­r, chief investment strategist, Geojit Financial Services. Independen­t market expert Ambareesh Baliga sees the bailout package as a lavish funeral Budget for a terminally ill patient. The government, he says, is trying to provide an honourable exit to the employees and will finally shut down a majority of its operations.

The biggest issue with BSNL and MTNL, according to him, is the employees belonging to the ‘monopoly’ era. It’s difficult to change the mindset to suit today’s ultra-competitiv­e environmen­t; that has been one of the major reasons for their decline, he says.

MTNL was set up on April 1, 1986, by the government to expand the telecom network, introduce new services, and raise revenue for telecom developmen­t needs of India’s key metros — Delhi and Mumbai. The company is also present in Nepal through its joint venture, United Telecom, and in Mauritius through its 100 per cent subsidiary, Mahanagar Telephone Mauritius.

BSNL, on the other hand, was incorporat­ed on October 1, 2000, and took over the business of providing telecom services and network management from the erstwhile central government Department­s of Telecom Services and Telecom Operations. According to reports, BSNL is India’s oldest communicat­ion service provider and its history can be traced back to the British era.

“A $100-billion opportunit­y in 2007-08 to a bailout scenario, it’s been a steep path downhill for BSNL. The allocation of 4G spectrum would only be an eyewash to show income from the sale of spectrum, as the funds would be allocated from another government pocket. The sale of real estate in both BSNL and MTNL would be longdrawn. Firstly, we need to understand how much real estate is owned by BSNL directly and not by the Department of Telecommun­ications. Secondly, the real estate market is not conducive to absorbing such properties. The only thing that has value is rural operations, which could be carved out and sold to larger players to generate real cash,” says Baliga.

On the bourses, MTNL has hugely underperfo­rmed benchmark indices, with the stock plummeting over 55 per cent, against a rise of over 10 per cent in the S&P BSE Sensex. This includes the 4.5 per cent rise in the counter on Wednesday, ahead of the proposed merger announceme­nt, to ~5.9 level on the BSE.

 ??  ?? MTNL was set up on April 1, 1986 to expand the telecom network and raise revenue for telecom developmen­t needs of key metros — Delhi and Mumbai — while BSNL was incorporat­ed on October 1, 2000
MTNL was set up on April 1, 1986 to expand the telecom network and raise revenue for telecom developmen­t needs of key metros — Delhi and Mumbai — while BSNL was incorporat­ed on October 1, 2000

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