BusinessLine (Delhi)

Can the FPO save the day for Voda Idea?

Telecom firm will need recapitali­sation in some form to pare debt so that it can compete on even keel with peers

- Hari Viswanath

From ‘fight to survive’ mode around a year back, Vodafone Idea appears to be shifting to ‘survive to fight’ mode, thanks to the followon public offer (FPO) of ₹18,000 crore announced last week.

There are positive takeaways, not the least being the fact that it will put to rest speculativ­e activities of a few market operators. These players have been making merry by putting out chatter on interested stake buyers (Verizon, Amazon, Elon Musk, et al) from time to time, with nothing coming off it.

The FPO needs to be weighed against how much difference it is going to make to the company’s financial strength in the highly competitiv­e Indian telecom market with its peers (Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio) having far superior financial muscle. To make a comeback, Vodafone Idea would do well to take a leaf out of the turnaround of TMobile. For this, at some time in future after the FPO, it must look for ways for sizeable recapitali­sation of the company.

UNDERPERFO­RMERS

Globally, telecom has been a challengin­g business with overwhelmi­ng regulatory issues across geographie­s. During the last 10 years, significan­t technologi­cal progress and evolutions have played out at a breathtaki­ng rate in telecommun­ications — 3G, 4G, 5G, smartphone boom, fibertohom­e, etc.

However, in this period the real winners have been companies in other sectors/that have capitalise­d on the telecom ecosystem. A look at the performanc­e of the shares of leading telecom companies across major economies reveals that telecom stocks have largely been underperfo­rmers and, in some cases, significan­t wealth destroyers even (see table).

Ten out of the 15 leading telecom companies have significan­tly underperfo­rmed the benchmark index in their respective country of listing. Since telecom companies in many geographie­s are high dividend payers, we have considered the gross total returns (TRI), which include dividends and assumes the payouts were reinvested in the stock.

The few companies that have managed to outperform the index are TMobile Us, Deutsche Telekom, NTT, China Mobile and Bharti Airtel. But here too, it is worth nothing that Deutsche Telekom’s outperform­ance is largely driven by its stake in TMobile Us in which it has always held a significan­t controllin­g stake, while China Mobile’s performanc­e on an absolute basis, is underwhelm­ing.

TMobile Us, represents one of the best examples globally of a successful turnaround. A distant fourth player in the US, trailing the more formidable giants then — AT&T and Verizon — the company under an unconventi­onal CEO, John Legere, adopted aggressive strategies to grow and win customers. Key to note is that a comfortabl­e leverage position made it possible to compete hard and win.

On the other hand, even companies considered global giants in telecom like AT&T and Vodafone are today just a shadow of their former glory.

HIGH ON DEBT

Telecom is a complicate­d business, which also requires periodical phases of heavy cash investment­s. Given this, the ₹18,000 crore that Vodafone

Idea plans to raise from the FPO may not be sufficient beyond the near to medium term.

At present, Vodafone Idea remains amongst the most indebted large telecom player globally by a wide margin with net debt/EBITDA of 14.3 times, which will come down to 12.7 times assuming the FPO goes well. This is still a very uncomforta­ble level and can constrain its ability to execute a successful longterm turnaround. For reference, globally telcos have net debt/ EBITDA below 5 times, with most in the comfortabl­e 23 times. And still it has been a challenge to create wealth for many of them.

Thus, while the FPO can be seen as a positive, recapitali­sation in some form that brings down the net debt/EBITDA to at least under 5 times may be required to ensure the company can compete on even keel with peers. Further equity capital raise later is the more likely solution.

There could be other ways such as the government converting more of the dues (now debt) into equity or the curative petition filed in the Supreme Court on AGR dues resulting in a favourable outcome. But these are long shots.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India