2nd UPDATE:India Sets Minimum Bid Price For 3G,WiMAX Spectrum
August 27 2009 - 1:22PM
Dow Jones News
India's government Thursday set 35 billion Indian rupees ($714
million) as the starting price for auctioning of one slot of
pan-India's radio bandwidth for third-generation, or 3G, mobile
phone services in the country.
It also decided to auction four such slots, clearing the path
for the much-awaited auction in the world's second-largest mobile
telephony market.
India will also auction three slots of radio bandwidth for
broadband wireless access on worldwide interoperability for
microwave access, or WiMAX, technology and set the base price for
one such slot at INR17.5 billion, federal Telecom Minister
Andimuthu Raja told reporters after a meeting of a ministerial
panel on the issue.
India's major telecom operators have been 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 email on their mobile phones.
India expects to garner INR250 billion from the auction process,
which is to be completed within three months, 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
increased from the earlier-decided INR20.20 billion for 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.
While BSNL operates in the country's 20 of 22 telecom service
areas, MTNL provides telephony services in the remaining two. The
two companies will be paying the government the highest bid amount
evolving from the auction process.
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.
"If the companies are able to segregate 3G revenue from 2G, they
could benefit significantly on the tax front," Biyani said.
Indian tax laws exempt telecom companies from paying tax on 3G
revenue for the first five years of operations and to pay limited
tax for seven years after that.
Indian telecom operators such as 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), and foreign telecom companies such as Telenor ASA (TEL.OS),
Emirates Telecommunications Corp. (ETISALAT.AD), and Japan's NTT
DoCoMo Inc. (9437.TO), which have entered the Indian telecom sector
in the recent past, are among the companies that are keen on
offering 3G wireless services.
"We believe 3G will drive the wireless broadband revolution in
both urban and rural India, contributing to inclusive growth,"
Manoj Kohli, Bharti Airtel's chief executive and joint managing
director, said in a statement.
Norway's Telenor, which owns 49% in Unitech Wireless Ltd., said
it sees 3G as a great opportunity to introduce the next level of
product and services in the Indian telecom market. It plans to
launch mobile phone services by the end of 2009.
"We are therefore actively considering participation in the
auctions. We await a comprehensive policy announcement to base our
business case on," said Rajiv Bawa, executive vice president of
corporate affairs at Unitech Wireless.
"Funding sources will also be part of our evaluation of this
business case," he added.
Reliance Communications, Idea Cellular, Vodafone-Essar and other
companies couldn't be reached for immediate comment.
Cellular Operators Association of India, or COAI - a body
representing mobile phone operators under the GSM technology - was
disappointed with the price. "It will be an unviable business
case... be it 2G, or 3G, it's a price sensitive market. Operators
can't afford to run [services] in a price like this," said T.V.
Ramachandran, COAI's director-general, adding that many potential
bidders will be put off by the price.
-By R Jai Krishna, Dow Jones Newswires; +91-11-4356-3333;
krishna.jai@dowjones.com