Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Airtel postpones Q2 results, seeks clarity on SC ruling

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

BENGALURU: Bharti Airtel Ltd said on Tuesday it would need more time to release its Septemberq­uarter earnings report, as the Indian company weighs the impact of a recent court ruling asking telecom firms to pay $13 billion in dues to the government.

The company’s board, which met earlier in the day, accepted the management’s recommenda­tion to shift the September-quarter results to November 14, the telecom operator said.

Shares of New Delhi-based Airtel, which was expected to release its quarterly numbers later in the day, dropped as much as 4.22%, while smaller rival Vodafone Idea Ltd fell 9.52%.

Both companies have been steadily losing subscriber­s to Reliance Industries-owned Jio.

India’s Supreme Court last week upheld a demand by the country’s telecoms department (DOT) that wireless carriers must pay ₹92,000 crore in overdue levies and interest.

Airtel said on Tuesday it has approached the DOT to “seek clarity” on the amount it had to pay, adding that it has sought the government’s support to deal with the “adverse outcome” of the court ruling.

Vodafone, already lugging over $14 billion in debt as of the previous financial year, said in a statement dated October 25 that it would engage with the regulator for relief, including a waiver of interest and penalties.

“The amount involved is pretty huge. If this goes on, (then) Vodafone could go bankrupt,” said Rusmik Oza, head of fundamenta­l research at Kotak Securities.

The total debt in the sector is about ₹4 lakh crore, according to trade body Cellular Operators Associatio­n (COAI) of India.

“The Supreme Court’s judgment is the last straw in contributi­ng to financial distress and it remains to be seen whether the industry will be able to recover from this setback,” COAI said in an emailed statement.

SECTOR CONSOLIDAT­ION India’s telecom sector has reduced to only four large players currently operating from about 10 a decade ago. That includes the state-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd, which merged last week.

The court-ruled fee payments would further consolidat­e the industry and leave only two companies, namely Airtel and Jio, analysts told Reuters.

“Telecom usage in India is pretty high. So if it falls in the hands of only a few players, it is not good,” said Vinod Nair, head of research, Geojit Financial Services.

“The government has to look into this.”

Kotak’s Oza echoed the sentiments, adding that for good competitio­n, the sector needed at least three players, if not four or five.

Jio, launched in 2015, is a relatively new player and would face a lighter burden in terms of levies.

“We have to wait and see how it plays out, but Reliance (Jio) will have much less to pay,” Oza added.

Jio’s parent Reliance shares were up 2.35% on Tuesday.

 ??  ?? The company’s board accepted the management’s recommenda­tion to shift the September-quarter results to November 14. MINT
The company’s board accepted the management’s recommenda­tion to shift the September-quarter results to November 14. MINT

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