Almost eight months after N Chandrasekaran, chairman, Tata Sons, sealed a deal with Sunil Bharti Mittal's Airtel for Tata Tele Services' consumer mobile business and also took a strategic call to exit from its enterprise business, the pain is far from over.
The fate of both – a formal closure of the deal with Bharti and sale of the enterprise business is tied to approvals from Department of Telecommunications (DoT). The delay, particularly in the sale of the enterprise business, has been eroding its valuation. With the entry of Reliance Jio, which announced its entry into the enterprise solutions segment in January, the delay can be further damaging, said sources. Tata Sons spokesperson declined to comment.
In January, Tata Sons had also received $1.2 billion dollar bid from of Tata group executives, led by head of international operations Mukund Rajan, for Tata Teleservices enterprise business. They were being backed by a consortium led by TPG Capital and a large sovereign pension fund in their bid for the assets of the telecom company. "Both the options (Rajan's offer and selling the business to Tata Communication) is still under consideration," said another source.
"It (Tata Teleservices's enterprise business) is not some "family silver" that the group may want to hold on to," said another source adding that the business needs a major overhauling and fresh investments. Moreover, with two of its biggest customers Reliance Communications and Aircel having gone bankrupt, the valuations of the business will be hit. "The sooner it is done, the better," he said.
But as Airtel will not take ownership of any liability, Tata Teleservices have to either clear the dues or give some kind of guarantees to DoT. The clearance of dues may also be a pre-condition for the acquisition of the enterprise business of Tata Teleservices by Tata Communications. At the time of Tata Teleservices-Airtel deal announcement, Tata Group had said that it would take additional debt within Tata Sons and take care of all liabilities, which would be refinanced in some form and shape.
The Tata Teleservices-Airtel deal has been approved by the competition commission of India (CCI) and market regulator SEBI and NCLT is reviewing the application. For Tata Teleservices Maharashtra Ltd, the application was filed on April 10 in NCLT and for Tata Teleservices, the date was May 17. After the NCLT approval, the deal has to be approved by DoT.