Tuesday 28 January 2014

Airtel seeks reduction in bank guarantees for spectrum auction: report

New Delhi: Telecom major Bharti Airtel has approached the Department of Telecom (DoT) to reduce the bank guarantees it had submitted for the upcoming spectrum auction, indicating a toning down of its bids for the airwaves.

Airtel, which submitted the highest amount in bank guarantees, sought the reduction on Tuesday, which was the last day for withdrawing applications to participate in the auction.

"We are approaching DoT to check if we could replace bank guarantees...making our total EMD (earnest money deposit) as Rs.2,975.25 crore instead of Rs. 3,700.25 crore submitted with the application," Airtel's director for legal and regulatory affairs, Jyoti Pawar, said in a letter to Telecom Secretary M F Farooqui.

The minimum earnest money required to be deposited depends on the spectrum category and service areas for which companies want to bid. As per rules, companies were asked to submit earnest money deposits in the form of bank guarantees to get points needed to bid in the spectrum auction.

Vodafone submitted Rs. 2,800 crore in bank guarantees; Reliance Jio Infocomm Rs. 2,596.25 crore; Idea Cellular Rs. 1,567.5 crore; Telewings (Uninor) Rs. 330 crore; Tata Teleservices Rs. 267 crore; Reliance Communications Rs. 198.75 crore, and Aircel Rs. 100 crore.

Finance Minister P Chidambaram-headed Empowered Group of Ministers on telecom decided to levy annual spectrum usage charge (SUC) on new airwaves for mobile services at 5 per cent of their adjusted gross revenue earned from telecom services. The current rate is in the range of 3-8 per cent.

A recommendation by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India for a uniform SUC of 3-5 per cent across all players had been backed by GSM operators such as Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular.

Airtel's licences in Delhi and Kolkata, where it holds the premium 900 MHz spectrum, are expiring in November. It is crucial for companies to emerge as the highest bidder in these two service areas to retain the airwaves.

Even after lowering of EMD, Airtel would have the highest points, enabling it to bid for the maximum quantity of spectrum in the auction starting on February 3.

Vodafone has opted out from bidding in seven of the 22 circles in the country, while RCom will not take part in eight circles. The other companies, except Tata Teleservices, have been declared eligible to bid in all circles.

Tata Teleservices was found ineligible to bid for Delhi services by DoT for an undisclosed reason.

A new player needs to submit a minimum bank guarantee of Rs.1,918.75 crore if it plans to bid for pan-India spectrum in the 1800 MHz band.

For the scarce 900 MHz band, companies are required to deposit Rs.438.75 crore as minimum earnest money if they want to bid in all three metros - Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata.

For the 900 MHz band in Delhi and Mumbai, the two major metros, companies are required to provide a bank guarantee of Rs. 172.5 crore each.

The government plans to offer 403.2 MHz of spectrum in the 1800 MHz band, in which frequencies were allocated to 2G licences in 2008, and 46 MHz in the premium 900 MHz band.

A new bidder has to buy a minimum of 5 MHz in the 1800 MHz band, while all players will have to bid for at least 5 MHz in the 900 MHz band.

The government expects a minimum of Rs. 11,300 crore in upfront payment from the upcoming auction of airwaves worth Rs. 48,685 crore at the base price. Successful bidders can pay the remaining amount over a maximum of 10 yearly instalments.

In November 2012, bids worth Rs. 9,407 crore were received for spectrum worth Rs. 28,000 that was offered.

In March 2013, no GSM operators bid at the auction and only CDMA operator Sistema Shyam bought spectrum of about Rs. 3,600 crore in eight of the 21 service areas.

As of 2:43 p.m., shares in Airtel were trading at Rs. 304.20 apiece on the BSE, down 0.93 per cent from the previous close.

0 comments:

Post a Comment