Business Standard

BANKS TO MEET ON TELECOM COMPANIES’ BAILOUT THIS WEEK

Lenders will wait for COS directions

- DEV CHAT TERJEE & RAGHU MOHAN write

Indian lenders are meeting this week to take a call on fresh funding that telecom companies have sought to pay the government their dues in accordance with a Supreme Court order. According to the court order on October 24, the telecom companies have three months to pay spectrum usage charges and licence fees in the way adjusted gross revenue has been calculated by the government.

Indian lenders are meeting in the week starting November 4 to take a call on fresh funding that telecom companies have sought to pay the government their dues in accordance with a Supreme Court order. According to the court order on October 24, the telecom companies have three months to pay spectrum usage charges and licence fees in the way adjusted gross revenue has been calculated by the government.

“The banks are meeting on November 7 to take into account the high debt of the telecom companies and discuss the additional line of credit they have sought,” said a source close to the developmen­t.

Following the court order, the telecom companies will have to pay ~1.33 trillion, which includes interest and penalties.

The bankers are also looking for directions from the committee of secretarie­s (COS) set up by the government to look into the issues related to the telecom industry.

At the end of March this year, the wireless telephony operators had together accumulate­d losses of ~1.4 trillion and outstandin­g debts of around ~4.9 trillion, making lenders worry about debt repayment.

Several companies have either shut down or have been referred to the National

Company Law Tribunal for debt resolution under the insolvency law. This has made debt repayment difficult for these companies. Bankers say it is unlikely that they can meet the telcos’ demand for additional funding.

“This demand is not for any business purpose but to comply with the court order. How this fresh funding is going to be serviced is a moot point because the balance sheets of telecom companies are stressed,” said a banker.

Another issue is how the telcos that have exited the sector are to account for such payments though that is a separate issue to be discussed, the banker said.

Another aspect playing in the backdrop is that under the inter-creditor agreement framework, offshore lenders are not part of it. Lenders having offshore exposure to telcos are worried that if matters get out of hand, they might land in the soup.

The rating downgrades of two listed players, Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea, will also be taken into considerat­ion while taking a final decision.

According to an affidavit submitted by the Department of Telecommun­ications (DOT) with the court in July this year, Bharti Airtel has pending licence fee dues of nearly ~21,700 crore. The dues of the combined entity of Vodafone Idea amount to nearly ~28,300 crore. Its loans are not guaranteed by the Aditya Birla Group or Vodafone Plc, the promoters of the company. Reliance Communicat­ions, which is undergoing insolvency proceeding­s, has pending licence dues of nearly ~16,500 crore. Tata Group company Tata Teleservic­es, which has shut down operations, has taken a fresh hit of ~9,987 crore and will have to again seek financial help from its holding company, Tata Sons, to pay the DOT.

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