India Telecom Business Encyclopedia

Telecom Business storehouse; As it exists; As it develops.

Posts Tagged ‘FIPB’

News Digest: MyFM, RCOM, Shaadi, IRCTC, TringMe, Nokia, SBI, IRDA, FrontLine, Tejas, Swan, TechM

Posted by telcobizpedia on August 25, 2009

From
http://www.medianama.com/2009/08/223-news-digest-db-groups-myfm-rcom-shaadicom-irctc-tringme-nokia-sbi-irda-frontline-tejas/
 on August 25, 2009

By Preethi J

MyFM To Raise 15.2M

Synergy Media Entertainment Ltd, DB Group’s FM radio division, will raise Rs. 1.52 crore through preferential allotment of fully paid up equity shares. It has received approval from the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB). Synergy runs 94.3 MyFM in 17 cities.

Related: Dainik Bhaskar IPO Filing: Digital Kiosks; IndiaInfo.com; I Media Corp

RCOM Launches Antakshari

Reliance Mobile launched a new VAS – Antakshari -  on its R-World platform which will allow the subscriber to play antakshari with anyone. Charges are Rs.30 per month with 30 minutes free usage. This service is being launched on both GSM and CDMA networks. (TelecomIndia Online)

IRCTC’s Online Sales Boom

Around 34% of the 880,000 tickets sold daily by the Indian Railways are booked online, ticket sale data between April and July 2009 by the IRCTC reveals. This is not all – online booking of the tickets is also popular amongst low income groups. An thumping 63% of online tickets were booked by them. (Business Standard)

Our Take: IRCTC continues to be the poster boy of Indian e-commerce. We only wish it were more efficient – instead of spending hours standing in a queue, we now spend hours on the website – logging back in due to jittery timeouts and searching for train names and numbers.

Related: IRCTC Does $102 Million In Online Transactions In August; Payment Trends; HDFC, ICICI, Cash Cards Significant

TringMe

This Bangalore based 2007 startup has a platform that helps developers create voice-enabled widgets for the Internet. Tringme hosts some 22 million call minutes per month and expects this to soar to 40 million in the next 3-4 months. One of its clients is Indiamart. (Moneycontrol)

Our Take: Such a platform could spark off more apps and options in the VoIP domain – so far ruled by Skype and Fring. Ofcourse there is still the regulatory hurdle to cross before VoIP usage picks up.

Strike At Nokia’s Manufacturing Plant in TN

Nokia employees at its handset manufacturing factory in Sriperumbudur have demanded a wage increase of €21 for all employees. (Evertiq)

M-Banking Adoption
State Bank of India has added 20,000 mobile-banking customers in 2 months, taking the total to 33,000. M-banking is rising in popularity for small value transactions. (PTI)

All Mobile Banking posts

Shaadi.com Stats

The site has 300m page views a month. 6,000 new profiles are added every day. (Guardian)

Insurance Inst Opts For Online Exams

Complaints of malpractices has led the Insurance Institute of India to make entrance exams for insurance agents online. The institute will be aided in setting up the online examinations by NSEiT, a subsidiary of the National Stock Exchange and Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority. (ET)

HomeShop18 To Raise Funding

The retail TV channel and online site is in discussion with prospective financial and strategic partners to raise money in the next year. It has outlined three priorities – be visible in every television household; to invest in customer experience; and, to reward loyal customers. Network18 owns 65% of HomeShop18. (VCCircle)

PE Firm Frontline Strategy Picks Up Stake In Tejas

The amount and stake are not known, and the stake was picked up by Frontline through a secondary transaction. Tejas has been backed by Battery Ventures, Cascade Capital Management, Mayfield Fund, Intel Capital, Goldman Sachs and Sandstone Private Investments. (VCCircle)

Change In Regulations Deferred: DoT

International telcos in India have been dealt a poor hand by the Indian government. The Department of Telecom (DoT) has postponed plans to remove the double taxation they currently have to comply with for offering long distance calls. They pay license fees twice to the government – for bandwidth which they purchase off domestic operators and again when they resell it to enterprises and their customers. (ET)

Etilsalat Awards IT Contract To Tech Mahindra

Following the move by other telcos to outsource their IT operations, Etisalat DB, which runs new telco Swan Telecom (renamed to Etisalat DB Telecom India), may award the majority of its Rs 150 million outsourcing project to Tech Mahindra. (ET)

Other telco-IT company relationships are: Unitech Wireless – Wipro ; Idea Cellular – IBM ; Bharti Airtel – IBM; Aircel – Wipro

Posted in Bharti Airtel, Ecommerce, Etisalat, Government, Handset Manufacturers, Idea Cellular, Infrastructure And Service Enablers, MCommerce, Other Infrastructure, Carriers and Logistics, Outsourcing, Revenue Performance Etc, Unitech, VAS Misc | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Deutsche Telekom Eyes Indian ISP Space; Devas Multimedia Looks To Raise Funds

Posted by telcobizpedia on August 24, 2009

From
http://www.medianama.com/2009/08/223-deutsche-telekom-eyes-indian-isp-space-devas-multimedia-looks-to-raise-funds/
 on August 24, 2009

By Preethi J

German telecom conglomerate Deutsche Telekom, which owns T-Mobile in USA, is planning to join the Internet Service Provider arena in India. According to a MarketWatch report, the telco is planning to set up a high-capacity radio network for quick Internet connections in metropolitan areas of India come next year.

I wonder if we need yet another ISP in India, with already a number of incumbent players – Reliance, Tata Indicom, MTNL, BSNL, Hathaway, Tikona, Sify and Bharti Airtel, and France Telecom, Vodafone and DEN Networks also planning ISPs. With the last mile still closed, wireless is being seen as the way to go; which is where Devas Multimedia comes in.

Devas MultiMedia:Looking To Raise Funds

Deutsche Telekom received permission from India’s Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) last year to invest Rs. 317.85 crore into Devas Multimedia, a little known Bangalore-based wireless services company, which was working on a long term Mobile TV (DMB) project with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). DT has acquired 17% stake in Devas.

Interestingly enough, Devas is looking to raise funds. The company, which already has Telecom Ventures and Columbia Capital as investors, apart from Deutsche Telekom, has a proposal pending with the FIPB for permission to “induct fresh foreign equity participation with the induction of a new foreign collaborator.”

Devas is a curious case: little is known about it, and it still appears to be in stealth mode:  there’s no website and there is little information on it except of it’s work with ISRO and its backers.

India desperately needs a catalyst to boost Internet penetration: Internet growth in July 2009 in India has actually fallen to 2.7% from 3.4% in June and 6.3% in May 2009. Besides the well known issues of delinking last mile access and ISP licensing which are throttling growth, other issues Deutsche Telekom will need to grapple with are low PC adoption and lack of Indic language content.

Companies Eying ISP Space In India

Earlier this year, France Telecom also entered India through Equant Network Services, its joint venture with Emery Technologies with the intention of launching Internet services;  Vodafone too announced its entry. The latest to announce plans of becoming an Internet service provider is DEN Networks, a cable TV company which is planning to go public to raise funds.

The Wireline Alternative: Broadband Over Power

Research and experiments on Broadband over Power Lines have been on for years – news about it pops up every few months. Indian Express has the latest: about Bengal Engineering and Science University professors and CESC have implemented Broadband over Power in two housing estates in Kolkata. The copper wires that supply electricity to double as broadband connections and installing a customer premise equipment that decodes the signals and brings them to your computer. But if it’s that simple, why is it taking so long to materialise? The government recently deferred an application by Powermax Communications, a provider of power transmission  and distribution management systems and broadband over power services, to increase foreign equity participation.

Posted in Bharti Airtel, BSNL, Business, FT and Orange, Government, Idea Cellular, Infrastructure And Service Enablers, Internet, Investment, MTNL, New Developments, Other Infrastructure, Carriers and Logistics, Reliance Communication, Tata Teleservices, Vodafone Essar | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Bharti rules out foreign investment in DTH biz

Posted by telcobizpedia on June 18, 2009

18 Jun 2009, 0124 hrs IST, Rashmi Pratap, ET Bureau

MUMBAI: Bharti Airtel, India’s largest telecom operator, said that its direct-to-home (DTH) venture, Bharti Telemedia does not require the approval of the Foreign Investment Board (FIPB), as the investment has come from Bharti Airtel’s internal accruals.

Responding to questions raised by FIPB regarding foreign investments in Bharti Telemedia, the company said there is no cash flow or investment from any foreign entity into Telemedia either directly or through Airtel.

In a letter to FIPB, Telemedia said FDI investment into Airtel has been in accordance with the norms and cap in the telecom sector and duly approved by FIPB. “Further, there is no FDI investor who has invested in Airtel specifically for downstream investment in the DTH sector. Accordingly, Bharti Telemedia did not apply for FIPB approval as it was not seeking fresh FDI or overseas investment,” it added.

This communication has come in response to a query from FIPB, which said approval for Bharti’s DTH services was “subject to compounding” (confirmation) by the Reserve Bank of India. Bharti said that “compounding” was not applicable in this case as only Indian money has been invested in Telemedia and no foreign money was routed to the company.

The government had earlier said the shareholding structure provided by Bharti Telemedia did not have FIPB approval and this was not in accordance with existing FDI policy. Last year, the Information & Broadcasting Ministry had also raised questions about Bharti Telemedia not having FIPB approval for foreign investments coming into it on a pro-rata basis through investing firms, including Airtel.

According to the FDI guidelines for DTH, total foreign equity holding in a company should not exceed 49% and the FDI component within the foreign equity should not exceed 20%. Airtel has 40% stake in Bharti Telemedia, while the remaining is held by an “Indian company of the Bharti group”, a Bharti spokesperson said.

Bharti also pointed out to FIPB that under the revised FDI policy, as per Press Notes 2 and 4, announced in February this year, Airtel qualifies as a company “owned and controlled” by resident Indians and there is no indirect FDI into Telemedia through Airtel.

Under the revised Press Notes, a company is considered Indian if Indian promoters have a stake of at least 51%. Moreover, the investments made by such companies in any joint venture or downstream venture will be treated as Indian. Since a major part of SingTel’s 31% stake and Vodafone’s over 4% share in Airtel is routed through majority-owned Indian companies, Airtel is owned and controlled by Indians.

Airtel launched its DTH services in October last year. It competes with Tata Sky, Reliance Communications’ Big TV, Zee’s Dish TV and Sun Direct in this segment. The company hasn’t yet started disclosing revenues from DTH services separately. “We will start disclosing the operational and financial performance of DTH operations next year, once they become material,” Airtel CEO and joint MD Manoj Kohli said recently.

Posted in Bharti Airtel, BIG TV, Dish TV, Government, Statutory And Regulatory, Tata Sky | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Vodafone approaches FIPB for NLD, ISP licences

Posted by telcobizpedia on June 16, 2009

From http://www.economictimes.com on June 16, 2009

NEW DELHI: Mobile services company Vodafone Essar has applied for Internet Service Provider

and national long distance licence and has approached the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for approval.

The company officials confirmed that the operator has applied for these two licences and aims to become a full-fledged communication service provider

in the country.

FIPB, on June 19, may take up the proposal, sources said. If Vodafone Essar, in which the UK-based mobile firm Vodafone holds majority stake, gets the national long distance licence (NLD) it will help the company save operating expenses for carrying STD traffic, instead of hiring other mobile company’s network for the purpose.

All the top mobile operators like Reliance Communications, Bharti, BSNL and MTNL have their own NLD infrastructure.

The company is also planning to enter the internet service segment in which all other major mobile operators like BSNL, Reliance Communications and MTNL has a presence.

Posted in Bharti Airtel, BSNL, MTNL, Reliance Communication, Vodafone Essar | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Bharti gets $4 bn bridge loan for MTN deal

Posted by telcobizpedia on May 27, 2009

27 May 2009, 0052 hrs IST, ET Bureau

MUMBAI/BANGALORE/NEW DELHI: Bharti Airtel is learnt to have received a commitment from Standard Chartered Bank to raise a $-4 billion bridge loan to finance its deal with MTN, said a banker close to the development.

The banker, who did not wish to be identified, said Standard Chartered has agreed to fully underwrite Bharti’s net acquisition cost. However, it has not yet been decided whether the UK-headquartered bank will put together a syndicate to finance the deal.

“Standard Chartered may or may not set up a syndicate of banks. It will take a call on this closer to the implementation of the deal which is a few months away,” he added. There is a strong possibility that a clutch of foreign banks will be interested in participating in the loan syndicate, should one be set up.

The $23-billion deal would see both companies offering equity stakes and cash to each other. In the end, Bharti Airtel will have to make a net cash payment of around $4 billion to acquire a 49% stake in MTN which will, in turn, pick up a 36% economic interest in the Indian telco.
Another banker said that the deal would be easy for Bharti, as it needs to raise 1.25 times its EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) to finance the deal. The country’s largest telco’s EBITDA stood at $3.19 billion in the last financial year. Its net debt was $1.4 billion, while debt-equity ratio was 0.2 in FY09. The enterprise value — market cap plus debt, minus cash and cash equivalent — was $33.8 billion on Friday’s closing.

“It’s an easy deal for them to do financially. The regulatory challenges are far more complex than the financing one. For Bharti and its advisors, dealing with regulatory issues were the priorities while structuring the deal,” this person said.

These bankers said that it was possible Bharti might also use some cash from internal accruals. In that case, the bridge loan from Standard Chartered would come down proportionately. The bridge loan would have a one-year duration. Normally, a bank charges anything between 0.5% and 1%, as fees for underwriting such a big deal.

When contacted, a Bharti spokesperson said: “We have not yet decided on the specifics of funding for this proposed transaction. However, our debt requirement is quite low and we do not consider that funding will be onerous.”
The proposed deal will not trigger an open offer, as it will be implemented through what is referred to as a scheme of arrangement between the shareholders of both companies.This means both companies will need to obtain approval from their shareholders before going ahead with the deal. This is a departure from a plain-vanilla takeover, where no such permission is required by either the target or the acquirer, said a legal eagle who has been associated with many M&A deals.

One of the bankers quoted earlier said that while Bharti and its advisors had taken great care in structuring the deal, the only problems that could possibly emerge were regulatory ones. The transaction, as reported by ET, would need clearances from India’s Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). A number of Indian Cabinet ministers have publicly praised the deal in the past two days.

Standard Chartered is Bharti’s advisor, while Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank are advising MTN. SingTel is being advised by Goldman Sachs.

The cash-cum-share swap deal is comparable with last year’s three-way transaction between UK’s Scottish & Newcastle (S&N), Danish beer maker Carlsberg and Dutch beer firm Heineken which saw Heineken acquiring a 37.5% stake in Vijay Mallya’s United Breweries. Heineken was exempted from the mandatory 20% open offer in India as it acquired stake in UB through a scheme of arrangements between the companies. The legal expert said that such a deal normally requires court approval.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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