Pay dues before deal, govt may tell Tata Tele
Tata Comm deal may be subject to clearing ₹10,000 cr dues
NEW DELHI: The government, which owns 26% in Tata Communications Ltd, may veto the company’s plan to buy the enterprise business of Tata Teleservices Ltd when it comes up for shareholders’ approval unless all government dues are cleared, a telecom ministry official said.
Tata Teleservices owes the government as much as ₹10,000 crore in spectrum and licence fees dues, the official said, requesting anonymity.
Tata Communications requires the government’s support as a shareholder to proceed with the acquisition in addition to a later-stage approval from the department of telecommunications (DOT).
“The government has a 26% share in Tata Communications. So, in the first stage itself, the government can halt the deal,” the official said.
Tata Communications has requested the government to collect the dues at a later stage, when it approaches the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for approval.
Payment of government dues has become a bone of contention between the government and telto Tata Teleservices in October agreed to sell consumer mobility business to Airtel Govt holds 26% stake in Tata Communications ecom operators as a wave of consolidation has swept through the industry following the entry of Reliance Jio in September 2016. Smaller operators such as Tata Teleservices, seeing little prospect of survival, have sold their businesses to larger rivals.
In October, Bharti Airtel Ltd agreed to take over Tata Teleservices’ consumer mobile business virtually for free. Airtel is acquiring the assets on a debtfree, cash-free basis, except for it assuming a fraction of the unpaid spectrum fees that the Tata group owes to the government.
At that time, Tata Teleservices had also said it was “in the initial stages of exploring combination of its enterprise business with Tata Communications” subject regulatory approvals.
In the case of Bharti Airtel’s acquisition of Tata Teleservices, the government’s approval will be required after clearances from the Competition Commission of India and the National Company Law Tribunal, the person said. Emails sent to Tata Teleservices and Tata Communications remained unanswered till press time.
On May 8, Tata Sons chairman N Chandrasekaran met telecom secretary Aruna Sundararajan to discuss the closure of Tata Teleservices’ consumer mobile business, as well as Tata Communications’ plan to buy the enterprise business of Tata Teleservices.
On that day, Chandrasekaran had told reporters that the Tata Communications board has to first approve the proposal to acquire Tata Teleservices’ assets. But the Tata group’s primary focus is to close the mobile business, he added.
The telecom department has, however, allowed the proposed merged entity of Vodafone India Ltd and Idea Cellular Ltd to clear dues related to spectrum charges and licence fees, a departure from the department’s earlier stand that the merger will be approved subject to the payment of all dues,
reported on May 25.
Mint