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Bharti signs for over US$2bil loan amid threat of ratings cut

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MUMBAI: Bharti Airtel Ltd is raising more than US$2bil in loans from banks, as India’s second-biggest wireless carrier faces increased competitio­n at home and the threat of a ratings downgrade to junk.

The company, controlled by billionair­e Sunil Bharti Mittal, has agreed to two- and three-year bilateral loans with 10 to 12 lenders, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who are not authorised to speak publicly and asked not to be identified.

Moody’s Investors Service on Nov 8 put Bharti’s Baa3 rating, its lowest investment-grade evaluation, on review for downgrade citing low levels of profitabil­ity and higher debt levels to fund capital spending.

A price war for Indian customers has worsened since billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd debuted with free services in 2016.

Bharti delayed plans for an initial public offering of its Africa unit due to the turmoil in emerging markets, people with knowledge of the matter said last month.

The all-in cost for Bharti’s dollar loan, which includes margin and upfront fees for the deals, is about 110-120 basis points over London interbank offered rate, according to people familiar with the deal.

A Bharti spokesman declined to comment on the transactio­n.

Bharti Airtel Internatio­nal (Netherland­s) B.V., a company unit, signed for separate bilateral loans totalling over 1.75bil (US$2bil) with more than 10 lenders, people familiar with the matter said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? On hold: A man stands next to the wall of a grocery shop painted with an advertisem­ent for Bharti Airtel in the southern Indian city of Kochi. Bharti delayed plans for an initial public offering of its Africa unit due to the turmoil in emerging markets. — Reuters
On hold: A man stands next to the wall of a grocery shop painted with an advertisem­ent for Bharti Airtel in the southern Indian city of Kochi. Bharti delayed plans for an initial public offering of its Africa unit due to the turmoil in emerging markets. — Reuters

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