Bharti Airtel along with its wholly-owned subsidiary has acquired about 4.7 per cent stake in Indus Towers from Euro Pacific Securities, an affiliate of Vodafone Group, a stock exchange filing said on Tuesday. The shares were acquired at Rs 187.88 a piece, it said. "...We wish to submit that the company, along with its wholly-owned subsidiary, Nettle Infrastructure Investments Limited, has acquired 127,105,179 equity shares (about 4.7 per cent) of Indus Towers at Rs 187.88 per share from Euro Pacific Securities Ltd., an affiliate of Vodafone Group Plc," Airtel said in a BSE filing. Last week, Bharti Airtel had said it will acquire 4.7 per cent stake in Indus Towers from Vodafone Group for about Rs 2,388 crore. Indus Towers, formerly Bharti Infratel, provides passive telecom infrastructure. It owns, deploys and manages telecom towers and communication structures for various mobile phone service operators. The company's portfolio of over 1,84,748 telecom towers makes it one of the .
The stock has gained 6 per cent in the last four trading sessions when compared with a 0.4 per cent gain on the benchmark.
Telecom company Bharti Airtel will acquire a 4.7 per cent stake in Indus Towers from Vodafone Group for about Rs 2,388 crore, according to a company filing
Closing Bell: Hindalco (up over 7 per cent), Tata Steel, Power Grid, JSW Steel, Coal India, BPCL, Titan Company, RIL, and Indian Oil Corporation were the biggest large-cap gainers on the bourses today
The agreement in on the principal condition that the amount paid shall be inducted by Vodafone as fresh equity in VIL and simultaneously remitted to Indus Towers to clear VIL's outstanding dues.
Rental renegotiations another dampener for the stock
Deal signed on condition that proceeds are used to clear Vi's dues
Deal conditional upon Vodafone infusing fresh equity in Vodafone Idea and simultaneously remitted to Indus Towers to clear VIL's outstanding dues
Closing Bell: Benchmark indices clocked their biggest one-day fall since March 2020 as Russia invaded Ukraine, rattling global markets
A combined 74.4 million equity shares had changed hands on the bourses till 9:52 AM. According to reports, British telecom giant Vodafone was in discussions to sell around 5% stake in Indus Towers
Bharti Airtel's parent Bharti Enterprises is Indus' largest shareholder, according to Refinitiv data.
Telecom infrastructure company Indus Towers on Thursday posted about 16 per cent rise in consolidated profit at Rs 1,570.8 crore for December quarter 2021-22. The company had registered a profit after tax of Rs 1,360 crore for the same period a year ago. Revenue of the country's largest mobile tower firm was higher at Rs 6,927 crore during the quarter compared to Rs 6,736 crore in the corresponding period of 2020-21. "At Indus Towers, the quarter marked completion of a year of operations of the merged entity which has made our industry leadership positioning more robust. "Our steady operational and financial performance during the quarter was reassuring. We believe that our focus to promote passive infrastructure sharing and capitalize on adjacencies will help us further strengthen our commitment of Putting India First through connecting lives," MD and CEO Bimal Dayal said. Indus Tower merged with Bharti Infratel in November 2020. The company's total mobile tower base increased t
The BSE Midcap index gained 1.8 per cent, while the Smallcap index rallied 2.2 per cent. All sectoral indices also ended with gains, Realty, Metal and Consumer Durables were the major gainers
In the past seven trading days, Indus Towers has surged 25 per cent post government announced reforms in the telecom sector
So far, the stock had been an under-performer having gained mere 4 per cent in the last six months compared to a 17 per cent rally in the S&P BSE Sensex.
Indus' share price has underperformed the market owing to concerns over its key tenant Vodafone Idea's survival
The scrip of debt-ridden VIL jumped over 8 per cent while that of Bharti Infratel soared 19 per cent
The stake sale follows the merger of two tower companies - Indus Tower and Bharti Infratel
Vodafone Group will hold 28.12 per cent stake in the merged entity, while the holding of Airtel Group will be about 36.7 per cent
The result indicated the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the lockdown, but its overall performance was weighed down by financial stress