This week, the government wants nearly Rs 1.5 trillion ($21 billion) in back licence fees and spectrum usage charges, including penalties, interest and interest on unpaid interest. Before they lost the case in the Supreme Court, the telcos maintained the government’s interpretation of what it was owed under the 1999 revenue-sharing agreement to be too broad and unfair because it included even their non-telecom revenue, such as interest and dividend income.
It’s a Pyrrhic victory for the government because not all the money it wants is coming. Of the 15 firms facing these long-contested demands, most have shut down, sold out or ended up insolvent. All eyes are now on Vodafone Idea, one of the three private-sector mobile services companies still standing. It has to pay Rs 53,000 crore by January 23, by government estimates. Even taking Vodafone Idea’s own calculation of the liability at Rs 44,200 crore, the loss-making carrier’s net debt soars to a life-threatening Rs 1.6 trillion. It may not be able to meet all its obligations.
The threat of a bankruptcy was real when I wrote about Vodafone Idea’s grim prospects in November. With the two large shareholders — Britain’s Vodafone and Kumar Mangalam Birla — reluctant to throw more good money after bad, the equity value of the business is hurtling toward zero.
Telcos have requested the top court to extend the payment terms. Even if Vodafone Idea stays afloat thanks to a last-minute compromise, customers have read the writing on the wall. The mobile carrier lost 36 million subscribers in November. And that was before all three players raised prices in December. As the churn gets busier, the hypercompetitive Indian market will effectively turn into a duopoly. Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio Infocomm will see their market shares settle at around 35 per cent and 45 per cent, respectively, by March 2021, according to Jefferies Financial Group.
Where will this leave Vodafone, or the $1.7 billion that the government earns from the current No.2 player as annual spectrum revenue? Of the many creditors that have exposure to the telco, Yes Bank is particularly vulnerable. Saddled with bad loans, the bank is struggling to raise funds as its capital buffers wear dangerously thin. If potential white knights get cold feet because of the lender’s outsize telecom exposure (as much as 29 per cent of shareholders’ funds, including 18 per cent for Vodafone Idea), then the country’s financial system may be looking at a big confidence shock.
That’s still a ways off, though. Jio, whose aggressive entry three years ago with free voice calls and cheap data triggered cutthroat competition, garnered revenue per user of just Rs 128 — not even $2 — in the December quarter, practically flat from a year earlier. Being a new entrant, Jio isn’t saddled by the government’s revenue demands that have come to haunt Vodafone Idea and, to a smaller extent, Bharti.
Until Mukesh Ambani, the deep-pocketed tycoon behind Jio, turns his attention from chasing market share to maximising returns on his $50-billion foray, pricing will stay irrational and new investment will remain constrained.
Although Bharti has raised new equity and convertible debt, at more than Rs 1 trillion, its net debt is onerous. It’s hard to see strong demand at the government’s auction of 5G airwaves in April. Vodafone’s long-standing tax dispute with New Delhi has been a cautionary tale. The business imploding because of another instance of government heavy-handedness will send a fresh bad signal about India’s business climate, though for the country’s telecom industry, the outlook will remain dull regardless of whether Vodafone Idea survives or not.
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