Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tatas agree to pay $1.18 bn to NTT DoCoMo for exit

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

Tata Sons has agreed to pay $1.18 billion in damages to NTT DoCoMo to settle longstandi­ng dispute over exit of the Japanese firm from their India joint venture.

The holding company of the $103-billion salt-to-software group firms, reached an out-ofcourt agreement with Japan’s largest mobile phone firm to enforce a June 2016 award of a London arbitral tribunal.

Following this, the two firms applied to the Delhi High Court to suspend legal proceeding­s and accept the settlement. The settlement came within days of Tata Group getting a new chairman in N Chandrasek­aran following the ouster of Cyrus Mistry last year.

“The settlement terms clear the way for the $1.18 billion already deposited by Tata Sons with the court to be paid to DOCOMO, and would allow DOCOMO to transfer its shares in Tata Teleservic­es, Inc,” the Japanese firm said in a statement.

DoCoMo had in November 2009 acquired 26.5% stake in Tata Teleservic­es for about R12,740 crore (at R117 per share). This was as per a 2008 understand­ing that in case it exits the venture within five years, it will be paid a minimum 50% of the acquisitio­n price.

DoCoMo in April 2014 decided to exit the joint venture that struggled to grow subscriber­s quickly. It sought R58 per share or R7,200 crore from Tatas.

But the Indian Group offered R23.34 a share in line with the RBI guidelines which state that an internatio­nal firm can only exit its investment at a valuation “not exceeding that arrived at on the basis of return on equity”.

The Japanese firm dragged Tatas to internatio­nal arbitratio­n where it won a $1.18-billion award. It also filed a plea in the Delhi High Court seeking enforcemen­t of the arbitratio­n ruling.

“Tata Sons is pleased to announce that in the interests of putting an end to a dispute that had arisen with NTT DOCOMO, Japan, and in the larger national interest of preserving a fair investment environmen­t in India, it has reached an agreement with NTT DOCOMO on a joint approach to enable enforcemen­t of the June 22, 2016, London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n (LCIA) award.

“As a gesture of good faith and in accordance with the Tata Group’s long-standing record of adherence to contractua­l commitment­s that it has always enjoyed both in India and abroad, the Board of Tata Sons has decided to withdraw its objections to the enforcemen­t of the Award in India,” Tata Sons said in a statement.

It said the agreement is a significan­t step towards resolution of the dispute and hoped to continue to work together with DoCoMo to achieve a resolution of this case as also look to further collaborat­ion in the future.

 ??  ?? Chandrasek­aran: First strike
Chandrasek­aran: First strike

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