UPDATE: India Sets Bid Price For 3G, WiMAX Licenses
August 27 2009 - 11:23AM
Dow Jones News
India Thursday decided on the starting price for auctioning
radio bandwidth for third generation, or 3G, mobile phone services
in the country and the number of licenses to be auctioned, clearing
the path for the much-awaited auction in the world's second-largest
mobile telephony market.
India's major telecom operators have been keenly awaiting the
auction of 3G spectrum, which is owned by the federal government,
as it will allow them to offer high-speed telecommunication
services that can attract users willing to pay a premium for
multimedia capabilities such as e-mail on their cellphones.
India will auction four 3G mobile phone service licenses and
three worldwide interoperability for microwave access, or WiMax,
technology licenses, federal Telecom Minister Andimuthu Raja told
reporters after a meeting of a ministerial panel on the issue.
India expects to garner INR250 billion from the auction, Raja
said.
He added that the auction process will be completed within three
months.
One pan-India 3G license will have a floor price of INR35
billion and a Wimax license will have a floor price of INR17.5
billion, Raja said.
India's plans to sell 3G radio bandwidth was twice delayed last
year after the federal finance ministry wanted the base price to be
hiked from the earlier-decided INR20.20 billion for a pan-India
license.
The government expects income from radio bandwidth sales to fund
social sector initiatives and infrastructure development.
The government had restricted the sale of radio bandwidth to
five slots, of which one has already been allotted to state-run
Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd., or BSNL and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam
Ltd., or MTNL, ahead of the proposed auctions.
The government's decision to auction only four slots is likely
to increase the bidding amount as there will be a minimum of five
telecom companies interested in bidding for 3G radio bandwidth on a
pan-India basis, said Nishna Biyani, telecom analyst at
Mumbai-based brokerage Prabhudas Lilladher.
Bharti Airtel Ltd. (532454.BY), Reliance Communications Ltd.
(532712.BY), Idea Cellular (532822.BY) and Vodafone Essar Ltd., the
Indian unit of Vodafone Group PLC (VOD), are among the companies
that are keen on offering 3G wireless services.
"If the companies are able to segregate 3G revenues from 2G,
they could benefit significantly on the tax front," Biyani
said.
Indian tax laws exempt telecom companies from paying tax on 3G
revenues for the first five years of operations and to pay limited
tax for seven years after that.
-By R Jai Krishna, Dow Jones Newswires; +91-11-4356-3333;
krishna.jai@dowjones.com