Friday, May 29, 2009

BSNL readies $10-b war chest for overseas buys

From The Hindu Business Line on 29 May 2009

Our Bureau
New Delhi, May 28 Following moves by private telecom players to acquire international operators, State-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd is readying a $10-billion corpus for its own global ambitions.

The company is scouting for a consultant to advise the PSU on the international plan. The PSU has also set up a separate business unit under a General Manager ranked officer to look aggressively for opportunities in foreign markets. While the other telecom PSU, Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd, has invested in a few international markets such as Nepal and Mauritius, this is BSNL’s first real move to go beyond India. Though the company had expressed interest to bid for licences in Tunisia and Oman earlier it did not go through with the plan.

According to BSNL officials, the company is open to all forms of investments including merger, acquisition, strategic partnership, or buying new telecom licences for starting greenfield operations. While the company is looking for opportunities across all geographies, it is more interested in the African and Middle East markets.

BSNL sources said the acquisitions will be funded from the company’s cash reserves. The money raised through a possible IPO could also be used for the international move.

The biggest fixed line player in India with 35 million subscribers. BSNL is the fourth largest mobile operator after Bharti Airtel, Reliance Communications and Vodafone Essar. Most of the other big players in the country already have some investments in the international market.
BSNL’s revenues have been dipping the past few years owing to high competition and low margins.

BSNL would be among the few government-owned companies worldwide looking to go beyond their domestic turf. Chinese telecom operators are also targeting operators in the African continent.

According to analysts, BSNL has the advantage of operating in a low-cost market such as India. It could replicate the low-margin, high-volume business model in other emerging markets such as Africa.

BSNL has the experience of operating millions of rural telephone lines. Most African countries are similar to India in terms of the large rural population. BSNL also has about three lakh employees who can be deputed to manage networks of international operators post a successful foray.

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