Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Idea-vodafone preparing war chest to take on rivals

- Rhik Kundu rhik.k@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Idea Cellular Ltd and Vodafone Group Plc’s Indian unit, which are set to merge to create India’s largest telecom operator, will invest ₹60,000 crore in infrastruc­ture to meet surging demand for data, according to a person aware of the matter.

The companies expect demand to surge sixfold to more than 120 petabytes a day in the near term from around 20 petabytes now, this person said, requesting anonymity.

Idea and Vodafone India Ltd, the nation’s second- and thirdlarge­st mobile operators, are building a war chest as intense competitio­n in the world’s No. 2 telecom market by users makes it critical for them to spend on strengthen­ing infrastruc­ture to cater to rising demand for data.

“The merged entity will invest about ₹60,000 crore over a period of three years to ramp up its infrastruc­ture to meet data demand, which will help it achieve expansion and vertical growth,” said the person cited above.

The pressure to spend more to match rivals comes amid rising stress on revenue and profits of Indian telcos after Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd entered the market in September 2016, offering free calls and cheap data, triggering a price war.

The Idea-vodafone merger, which is expected to be completed before March 31, will also see the combined entity generate significan­t synergies.

“Overlappin­g of spectrum will be reversed, and with large spectrum chunks at disposal, rolling out faster data will be possible,” the person said adding that the infrastruc­ture ramp-up would see the company increase its capacity by up to six-seven times its existing capacity and also provide high-speed data at 200-300 Mbps as compared to current speed limits of 20-30 Mbps.

The investment­s being made by Vodafone-idea will help the merged firm match data capacities of its rivals, who have already earmarked huge investment­s.

Industry leader Bharti Airtel had in November 2015 announced that it would invest ₹60,000 crore on a massive network transforma­tion programme called Project Leap, which would vastly improve its network quality.

Ambani’s Reliance Jio has made an initial investment of more than ₹1.5 lakh crore in setting up telecom infrastruc­ture, such as telecom towers, fibre optic cables and purchase of spectrum.

Data usage in India has exploded over the past two years, particular­ly after the entry of Reliance Jio. The volume of wireless broadband data consumed by Indians rose from less than 200 million gigabytes in June 2016 to 1.3 billion gigabytes in March 2017, according to the Internet Trends 2017 report.

Consulting firm Deloitte estimates India’s mobile data usage to grow to 1,608 petabytes by 2020. One petabyte amounts to 1,000 terabytes or 1 million gigabytes.

A Vodafone India spokespers­on said the company doesn’t comment on forward-looking scenarios, while an email sent to an Idea Cellular spokespers­on remained unanswered.

The merged entity, which will have net debt to the tune of ₹1.08 lakh crore, expects savings from synergies in capital and operating expenditur­e as the group now expects the merger to be completed much ahead of the original deadline of September 2018.

“A large chunk of the debt of the merged entity will be spectrum-denominate­d debt, whose repayment has been extended from 10 to 16 years by the government,” the person said, adding that the debt will not deter the firm from making infrastruc­ture investment­s.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Idea and Vodafone, which are set to merge to create India’s largest telecom operator, will invest ₹60,000 crore in infrastruc­ture over three years to meet data demand
MINT/FILE Idea and Vodafone, which are set to merge to create India’s largest telecom operator, will invest ₹60,000 crore in infrastruc­ture over three years to meet data demand

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