Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Telecom cash grab puts foreign investment at risk

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For Kumar Mangalam Birla’s textile-to-telecom empire, adversity is a 100-year-old companion. In 1919, when the Indian businessma­n’s greatgrand­father wanted to start a jute mill, the dominant British firm, Andrew Yule & Co., bought all the surroundin­g Calcutta land. The Imperial Bank, the forerunner of today’s State Bank of India, initially refused Birla a loan.

The government of post-independen­ce India stymied the Birla conglomera­te with kindness. Soviet-style planning and state socialism protected the family’s legacy licensed firms by keeping competitio­n out. But they inhibited growth. Birla’s father, Aditya Vikram, went to Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippine­s because he wasn’t allowed to expand at home.

“I for one fail to see where the concentrat­ion of economic power is: with the big business houses or with the government?” he wondered in 1979.

Fast forward 40 years, and the 52-year-old current chairman of the group would be justified to reprise his late father’s frustratio­n. The liberalisi­ng spirit of the 1990s Indian economy has lost much of its force. After dismantlin­g the license raj, a system of strict government-controlled production, and encouragin­g capitalism, New Delhi is gripped once more by a feverish statism that’s making Birla’s shareholde­rs nervous. The slide began before PM Narendra Modi came to power in 2014, and was one of the reasons why businesses backed his call for “minimum government, maximum governance.” But five years later, relations between private enterprise and the government have turned even testier.

Take telecommun­ications, the main source of investors’ anxiety.

Ever since India opened up the state-run sector in the 1990s, the Aditya Birla Group has been an anchor investor. Partners and rivals like AT&T Inc., India’s Tata group, and Li Ka-shing’s CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd came and went, but Birla remained. Currently, the group owns 26% of the country’s largest mobile operator by subscriber­s, Vodafone Idea Ltd, with the British partner controllin­g 45%. A court last month directed this bruised survivor of a nasty price war to pay ₹28,000 crore in past government fees, interest and penalties. Overall, India wants to gouge its shriveled telecom industry of $13 billion.

The fund-starved government expects operators to cough up more at 5G auctions next year. How long can the Birla boss hang in? With Vodafone Idea saddled with losses and $14 billion in net debt, should he even bother?

It’s doubtful whether partner Vodafone will linger. This isn’t the first time it has been clobbered by unreasonab­le government demands. In 2012, India retrospect­ively changed its tax law to pursue a $2.2 billion withholdin­g tax notice against the UK firm. Seven years later, that dispute is far from resolved, and the unit has now been slapped with a new bill.

In its half-yearly earnings reported on Tuesday in London, Vodafone wrote down the book value of its India operations. Vodafone’s 42% stake in a separate cellular tower company in the country, once sold, will get used largely to pay off the loan it took to pump capital into the main telecom venture. After that, the UK firm will have a little over $1 billion left to support Vodafone Idea, according to India Ratings & Research, a unit of Fitch Ratings. However, the India business would be required to find $5.5 billion just for interest- and spectrum-related payments until March 2022.

Will Birla step into the breach?

Out of its 26% in Vodafone Idea, about 11.6% is held by Grasim Industries Ltd, and another 2.6% by Hindalco Industries Ltd. Hindalco, among the world’s largest aluminum makers, is battling weak metals demand and a complicate­d takeover of the US -based Aleris Corp. The bulk of the burden of a telecom rescue—should there be one—would fall on Grasim. It acts as a holding company for Birla’s cement and financial services businesses, apart from directly owning factories that churn out wood-based fiber and chemicals like caustic soda used in soap and detergent.

The Centre should see the folly of effectivel­y turning the industry into a two-horse race between Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd, controlled by Mukesh Ambani, and Bharti Airtel Ltd, which, too, is staggering under a mountain of debt. As IIFL Securities put it, bankruptcy of Vodafone Idea would hurt all stakeholde­rs.

Vodafone and Birla would lose control, the government would forgo $1.7 billion in annual spectrum revenue and banks would take losses on their $4 billion-plus exposure.

Such an outcome would cast a serious doubt on the ability of private entreprene­urs to flourish, especially if they—like Birla or Amazon.com Inc. boss Jeff Bezos—happen to find themselves in competitio­n with Ambani in a tightly regulated industry. Future investors will think twice.

The rift between the government and business wasn’t Modi’s creation, but to allow the mistrust to turn into a chasm would be one of his administra­tion’s gravest mistakes.

Views are personal.

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