RCom falls ahead of NCLT's approval for merger with Aircel

Shares of Reliance Communications fell in Friday's trade ahead of The National Company Law Tribunal's decision on Monday on whether or not to consider the proposal of merger between Reliance Communications' wireless business and Aircel.
RCom falls ahead of NCLT's approval for merger with Aircel
Rcom-Aircel merger

Following the development, the stock lost 1.18 per cent to Rs 1,568.20 on BSE. It opened at Rs 1,554.90 and touched an intraday high and low of Rs 1,578 and Rs 1,554.90 respectively.

The merger, if it happens, will set the ball rolling for a sale of RCom’s stake in its tower unit to Canada’s Brookfield. Together, the deals could reduce the telecom firm’s debt of nearly Rs 45,000 crore by as much as 60 per cent.

Promoters held 46.30 per cent stake in the company as of June 2017.

For the quarter ended June 30, 2017, the company reported total revenue at 70,434 crore and net profit stood at 8,196 crore.

The scrip touched its fresh 52-week high of Rs 1,665 on August 3, 2017 and its 52-week low of Rs 932 on November 9, 2016.


Aircel may recast Rs 20k-cr debt if RCom deal doesn’t get nod


Aircel is considering an independent restructuring of its Rs 20,000-cr debt as one of the options for continuing operations on its own in case the pro-posed merger with Reliance Communications does not get approval, people familiar with the matter said.

The carrier, whose majority is owned by Malaysia’s Maxis, has approached financial consultants to explore such are structuring and has sought advice on whether it could use insolvency or debt recast to cut debt and continue as a niche player in a limited number of circles, one of the people said.

At a recent closed-door meeting, Aircel chief executive Kaizad Heerjee advised his finance, human resources and technology heads to plan running the company as if no merger with Reliance Communications was planned, one person close to the matter said.

RCom and Aircel didn’t respond to ET’s detailed queries sent on July 31, but officials close to the companies privately sa-id both are committed to the deal. Aircel’s moves come as the two telcos are running against time to get the merger cleared by authorities, including in the National Company Law Tribunal(NCLT).

The NCLT will next hear on Au-gust 14 whether to admit the merger petition for consideration amid opposition from lenders including China Develop-ment Bank, vendors such as Ericssonand Bharti Infratel, besides the Telecom department (DoT).

Amid all this, both RCom and Aircel are continuously losing subscribers and re-venue, amid widening losses and rising debt. RCom is banking on the Aircel deal and sale of its tower unit to Brookfield —contingent on the Aircel deal since the buyer wants clarity on tenancy guarantees — to pare its over Rs 45,000 crore debt by 60%.

But they must do so by December under a strategic debt restructuring (SDR) process — triggered after RCom defaulted on some loan payments — else it will fall into an NPA (non-performing assets) category which will force lenders to take over, scuttling any deal.

In December last year,the two companies announced a 50:50 JV — to be named Aircom — in what would have been the first merger of scale in the sector. RCom has lost 4.2 mil-lion users between December, when the merger with Aircel was announced, and May.

Aircel has lost 142,021 users in the same period. Both have struggled to take on the brutal price competition triggered by the entry of Reliance Jio last September. “We are selling at the lowest prices ever,but that is still higher than free,” said a sales executive at Aircel. “At this rate,how will the combine service debt,”

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RCom falls ahead of NCLT's approval for merger with Aircel RCom falls ahead of NCLT's approval for merger with Aircel Reviewed by Shan Paul on August 11, 2017 Rating: 5

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