"The top four telcos - Bharti Airtel, Vodafone, Idea Cellular and Reliance Communications - may hesitate to bid for 700MHz spectrum, given their stretched balance sheets and need to preserve cash in light of impending competition from the entry of Reliance Jio in March-April 2016," Fitch Ratings said in a statement.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India has recommended a record base price of Rs 11,485 crore per Mhz for 700 Mhz, which is to be among the radiowaves that are to be auctioned in the forthcoming round of bidding. If all the available frequencies get sold at Trai suggested price then it can alone contribute over Rs 4 lakh crore.
Trai's recommendations on the reserve price of a spectrum are subject to approval by government.
"India's telecom regulator recommended a reserve price of Rs 115 billion (USD 1.7 bn) per MHz for pan-India 700 MHz spectrum. Fitch Ratings believes that efficiency gains from deploying 4G services on 700 MHz will be insufficient to offset the relatively high price," the statement said.
"Consequently, the 700 MHz spectrum auction planned in second half of 2016 may not be attractive to telcos, given limited device availability and that telcos possess alternative spectrum to roll out 4G services," Fitch said.
It cited the example of Bharti Airtel which owns about 40 per cent of the 900 MHz spectrum among private players and is offering 4G services in 1800 MHz and 2300 MHz.
"In March 2015, the telcos committed the largest-ever investment of USD 17.7 billion, mainly due to the necessity to retain their expiring spectrum to avoid network disruption. The auction saw aggressive bidding as spectrum offered was limited. We believe that there are far fewer reasons for telcos to invest as much in the 700MHz auction," Fitch said.
The firm said that spectrum sharing and trading guidelines is another reason that auction may not be attractive for telecom players to procure airwaves.
The agency has a negative outlook on Indian telcos for 2016 as it feels Reliance Jio's entry in the market is likely to provide cheaper and faster data-focused tariff plans which will put pressure on balance sheets of other telecom operators.
Fitch said there are no new incentives for people to
Post the demonetisation announcement on November 8, the government and banks have been taking several steps to push digital transactions.
Fitch said it expects RBI's 1.50 per cent policy rate cuts since the beginning of 2015 to feed through to higher GDP growth, even though monetary transmission has been impaired by relatively weak banking sector health.
"A surge in low-cost funding due to the demonetisation may remove a constraint on banks that prevented lending rates from keeping pace with the RBI's policy rate cuts in recent years, although this will depend on deposits remaining in banks beyond the next few months," it said.
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