American Tower close to Tata Tele unit stake
American Tower Company (ATC) is believed to be the frontrunner among the bidders for investing in the tower firm of Tata Teleservices.
Tatas value the tower business at $2 billion
NEW DELHI: American Tower Company (ATC) is believed to be the frontrunner among the bidders for investing in the tower firm of Tata Teleservices. Boston-headquartered ATC is a publicly-held company owning and operating over 23,000 sites in the US, Mexico and Brazil.
According to industry sources, Tata Teleservices and ATC are in talks over the valuation of the tower entity of the telco. Sources said that Tata Teleservices has pegged the valuation of its tower company at around $2 billion.
American Tower Company did not respond to an e-mail questionnaire sent by this newspaper early this week, on whether it was in the final stages of negotiations with Tata Teleservices for investing in its hived-off tower unit, or if it agreed with the estimated valuation of $2 billion for the same.
Recently, Tata Teleservices managing director Anil Sardana had said that the task of divesting stake in its tower company would be concluded by the end of May. Tata Tele wants to divest anything between 26% and 49%. According to the company, around 15 strategic investors were shortlisted for picking up a stake in the hived-off tower entity of Tata Tele. At present, Tata Teleservices Ltd (TTSL) has 10,000 towers, and Tata Teleservices Maharashtra Ltd (TTML) 3,500 towers.
Meanwhile, industry buzz is that Indus Towers, the joint venture tower company between Bharti, Vodafone and Idea, may also look at divesting some of its stake to strategic investors. Bharti Airtel, Vodafone-Essar and Idea merged their tower assets in 16 circles to form an independent tower company Indus Towers. Bharti and Vodafone have 42% stake each in the company while Idea Cellular holds 16% in it.
Dilution of stake in the tower entities of telcos started a few months ago. Bharti Infratel, the tower company of Bharti Airtel, offloaded around 11% for an estimated $1.25 billion in two rounds recently. The investors include Temasek Holdings, Goldman Sachs, Macquarie, Citigroup and Investment Corporation of Dubai among others. The enterprise valuation of Bharti Infratel is pegged in the range of $10 billion to $12.5 billion.
Before Bharti, other telecom operators like Reliance Communications (CDMA) and Spice (GSM) opted for divestment in their tower companies. Reliance Communications divested 5% in its tower company to a group of seven institutional investors. At that point, the equity valuation of Reliance Telecom Infrastructure (RTIL), the towerco of Reliance Communications, was $6.75 billion and enterprise value was $8.25 billion. Spice Communications sold its tower arm to Srei Infrastructure (which owns standalone tower company Quipo) for Rs 500 crore.
The equity dilution model works very well in the tower business as this is a capital-intensive business. While financial investors offer capital for the infrastructure needed in the business, strategic investors can help in the actual operation of tower companies, experts said.
- Bharti Airtel
- Reliance Communications
- Vodafone
- Indus Towers
- Brazil
- Citigroup
- Dubai
- Goldman Sachs
- Idea Cellular
- Mexico
- Temasek Holdings
- US
- Bharti Infratel
- Tata Teleservices Ltd
- Macquarie
- Srei Infrastructure
- Tower Company
- American Tower Company
- Investment Corporation
- Tatas
- Anil Sardana
- Tata Teleservices Maharashtra Ltd
- Spice Communications
- Reliance Telecom Infrastructure