Vodafone Idea, lenders jump after govt nod to telecom package, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BENGALURU: Shares of Vodafone Idea Ltd surged nearly 20% and banks with exposure to the telecom firm jumped on Thursday, a day after the Unino Cabinet approved a relief package for the troubled sector.

A four-year moratorium on airwaves payments due to the government and raising the tenure of airwaves held by firms were a part of the package, along with a change in the contentious definition of adjusted gross revenue (AGR) to exclude non-telecom income.

Analysts said that the measures could restore the idea of a three-player telecom market for the time being, but it does not provide a long-term solution.

“For long-term sustainability, Vodafone Idea will require not only capital infusion, but a sizeable tariff hike for 4G pre-paid customers. In the absence of this, the industry can slip towards a duopoly,” said Pranav Kshatriya, vice president of institutional equities at Edelweiss Securities.

Troubles for the telecom sector, which had already been disrupted by the entry of billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Jio and forced some rivals out of the market, had been compounded with the huge dues to be paid to the government.

Vodafone Idea, a combination of the India unit of Britain’s Vodafone Group and domestic telecoms firm Idea Cellular, alone still owes the government about Rs 50,000 crore ($6.81 billion).

Shares of the company climbed 20% to their highest since June 29, while rival Bharti Airtel rose up to 1.4% before shedding early gains.

IDFC First Bank, Yes Bank and IndusInd Bank, which, as per Nomura, have exposures to Vodafone Idea at 3%, 2.4% and 1.7% of their loan books, respectively, climbed as much as between 5% and 13%. Analysts say the default risk has been largely taken out in the near medium term.



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Voda Idea Q1 net loss widens to Rs 7312.9 crore; ARPU falls to Rs 104, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Vodafone Idea (Vi) posted a net loss of Rs 7312.9 crore in the fiscal first quarter compared to Rs 6985.1 crore in the previous quarter, hurt by slowdown in economic activities which dragged down the revenues of the debt laden telco.

The third-largest operator reiterated its viability concerns unless it manages to raise funds, which in turn depends on the status of statutory dues that it owes the government, and also on other factors such as negotiations with lenders on better terms for repayment.

“The Company’s financial performance has impacted its ability to generate the cash flow that it needs to settle/ refinance its liabilities and guarantees as they fall due, which along with its financial condition, is resulting in material uncertainty that casts significant doubt on the Company’s ability to make the payments mentioned therein and continue as a going concern.,” India’s only loss-making private operator said.

Total quarterly revenue for the cash-strapped operator fell to Rs 9152.3 crore in the April-June from Rs 9,607.6 crore when compared sequentially, the company said in a notice to the stock exchanges on Saturday.

Adjusted gross revenue (AGR), is the moot issue between Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and Vi, and the telco has has filed a review petition in the Supreme Court against DoT’s calculation “errors”.

The DoT has asked for Rs 58,254 crore from Vi, of which the telco has paid Rs 7,854 crore. The telco Saturday said that as of June end, its AGR liabilities, including interest, stood at around Rs62,180 crore, according to DoT’s calculations.

Vi said that the total debt of the Group stands at Rs 191,588.8 crore of which the next instalment of the AGR liability – of around Rs9,000 crore – and debt amounting to Rs 16,853.4 crore is payable in next 12 months.

The results are the first after Aditya Birla Group chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla quit as Vodafone Idea non-executive chairman and as a director on the boad. His resignation had come less than two months after he wrote to the government that he is willing to give up his stake in Vi to any government entity, which can ensure the telco’s survival.

Funds are now the telco’s lifeline and the operator on its attempts to raise Rs 25,000 crore said ” We continue to focus on executing our strategy to keep our customers ahead, and our cost optimization plan remains on track to deliver the targeted savings. We are in active discussion with potential investors for fund raising, to achieve our strategic intent,” said Ravinder Takkar, MD & CEO.

Both parents – Vodafone Group and the ABG – though have refused to infuse fresh equity into the cash strapped telco. The company had cash & cash equivalents of Rs. 9.2 billion at June end.

“The said assumption of going concern is essentially dependent on its ability to raise additional funds …successful negotiations with lenders for continued support/additional funding, monetisation of certain assets, outcome of the review petition filed … Supreme Court and clarity of the next instalment amount, acceptance of its deferment request by DoT and generation of cash flow from its operations that it needs to settle/renew its liabilities/guarantees as they fall due,” Vi said.

It added, “As result of earlier rating downgrades, certain lenders had asked for increase of interest rates, and additional margin money/security against existing facilities. The Group has exchanged correspondences and continues to be in discussion with the lenders for the next steps/ waivers”. Also, the company needs to provide additional bank guarantees of Rs 975.7 crore to avail additional moratorium of one year on spectrum installments for November 2012, February 2014 and October 2016 auctions, amounting to Rs 6439.2 crore. Guarantees amounting to Rs 13,358 crore are due to expire during the next 12 months.

In its review petition, Vi said it has “outstanding utilised facilities” of approximately Rs 47,000 crore from banks, non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) and mutual funds, of which Rs 25,000 crore is from public sector banks, over and above the amount due to DoT.

The company said its subscriber base declined by 12.3 million to stand at 255.4 million subscribers as against rivals Jio and Airtel who have 440.6 million and 321.23 million, respectively. The telco said pandemic related lockdowns impacted gross additions but despite that, its 4G user base was steady at 112.9 million 4G customers.

Its quarterly earnings before interest, tax, depreciation & amortization (Ebitda) reduced to Rs 3,707.7 crore from Rs4,408.7 crore.

Ebitda margins contracted to 40.5% from 45.9% in the previous quarter.

The operator’s average revenue per user (ARPU) was Rs 104, lower than Rs 107 clocked in the previous quarter. Rivals Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio, have posted an ARPU of Rs 146 and Rs 138.4 respectively in the April-June quarter.



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Future, Voda Idea rulings threaten Rs 50,000 crore loans, underscore legal risks for banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks have been cautious in big-ticket lendings, taking into consideration various parameters.

Now they need to be overcautious about the adverse court rulings as just two verdicts of Future Group and Vodafone Idea delivered last week have put over Rs 50,000 crore loans in jeopardy.

Last week, the Supreme Court effectively blocked Future Group’s $3.4 billion sale of retail assets to Reliance Industries, jeopardising nearly Rs 20,000 crore the retail conglomerate owes to Indian banks.

Loans to Future worth nearly 200 billion rupees were restructured earlier this year, giving it more time to come up with repayments due over the next two years, but that was on the premise that Reliance would bail it out,

That Future ruling was delivered days after the Supreme Court rejected a petition to allow telecom companies to approach the Department of Telecommunications to renegotiate outstanding dues in a long-runinng dispute with Indian telecom players.

That raises concerns over whether Vodafone Idea will repay some Rs 30,000 crore it owes to Indian banks and billions of dollars more in long-term dues to the government.

At the end of March, Indian banks had total non-performing assets of Rs 8.34 lakh crore, the government has said.

Vodafone Idea

If the telecom firm fails to repay its adjusted gross revenue dues to the government and its guarantees are invoked, it would immediately turn into debt and would soon be classified as a non-performing asset. The Supreme Court last week rejected telecom firms’ plea for reconsidering calculation of adujsted gross revenues.

The hit on PSU banks will not be as large as their exposure because in recent years lenders have been demanding a substantially higher cash margin for their guarantees. IDBI Bank is understood to have up to 40% margins for the guarantees it has extended. But even then it will be large enough to wipe out profits for many.

What ahead?

The insolvency process can work only when there are buyers. In the case of Vodafone, the Rs 53,000-crore AGR (adjusted gross revenue) dues to the Centre are a deterrent. This is despite Birla being willing to write down his entire equity. The government dues cannot be avoided as the Centre cannot make an exception for one company. Even in insolvency cases, the department of telecom has claimed its dues to be that of a financial creditor although there have been attempts to mark them as operational creditors.

The uncertainty over DoT’s claims, which is already being experienced by lenders in the Reliance Communications insolvency case, would make telecom resolutions a challenge. Lenders do not want to risk insolvency as this would result in the exit of customers which was the case with RCom.

With the company’s debt obligations being equal to 1.5% of the banking sector’s credit, experts have suggested the debt be converted into equity shares, the company be nationalised and perhaps merged with BSNL and MTNL. However, it seems highly unlikely the government will nationalise the company. On balance, they would reckon it is better to give up the revenues than act politically incorrectly in bailing out a private sector player—one with a foreign promoter.

The Future is bleak

Local and overseas banks — 28 of them led by Bank of India — were counting on Reliance Retail’s takeover of the Future Group for recovery of their dues.

In April, the KV Kamath Committee set up by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) approved a proposal by the lenders to restructure loans to Future Retail and

Future Enterprises, the main units of the Kishore Biyani-led group. Bank of India is the lead lender among the 28 local and overseas financiers that floated the loan recast plan.

According to that deal, Future Group had promised to pay banks Rs 6,900 crore in two tranches by the end of FY22, mainly by selling its small format stores.

This would allow lenders to convert the short-term loans, non-convertible debentures and overdue working capital loans into term loans, which were to be repaid in two years. The group has not yet identified any buyers for these stores.

Bankers had agreed on the deal as a temporary arrangement on expectations that the Reliance takeover will be completed soon, meaning the lenders would no longer depend upon Future to make the payments.

With this latest court order, all such plans will have to be reconsidered.

The group has very little immovable property that can be sold. All its assets are in the form of inventory and receivables that are very difficult to recover. The Reliance-led plan is the best option right now because the recovery will be very low in the bankruptcy courts.

Future Retail is the largest debtor in the group, with about Rs 10,000 crore of dues. Two other listed companies — Future Enterprises that holds its supply

chain, and Future Lifestyle Fashions that houses apparel brands such as Central and Brand Factory — add another Rs 11,000 crore to the debt pile.

Lenders had agreed to an interest moratorium between March 1, 2020 and September 30, 2021. They had also agreed upon waiving all penal interest and charges, default premiums and processing fees unpaid since March 2020 to the date of the implementation of the Reliance Retail takeover.

There is some respite in the central bank’s extension of the timeframe for meeting the financial parameters for companies undergoing restructuring.



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A collapse of Voda Idea will hurt IDFC First Bank, YES Bank most, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The looming prospect of a financial crisis in India’s third-largest telecom operator, Vodafone Idea, will spell disaster for some of the country’s biggest private sector banks just when they were recovering from a multi-year bad loan cycle.

The refusal by existing promoters of Vodafone Idea to infuse cash in the debt-laden company and the Supreme Court’s recent dismissal of a plea for rectification of alleged miscalculation in adjusted gross revenue dues payable by the company to the government have condemned the telecom operator to bankruptcy, unless it can raise fresh capital.

Prospects of fund raising for the company look grim given that any new strategic investor will have to pour in billions of dollars that will largely be channelled to the government coffers and will not be reinvested in the company to prepare it for the new 5G world.

The resignation of Kumar Mangalam Birla as head of the company and his offer to the government to buy out Aditya Birla group’s stake is likely to further discourage potential investors.

In that backdrop, Vodafone Idea is unlikely to be able to service its gross debt of over Rs 1.8 lakh crore. The telecom operator owes at least Rs 28,700 crore to several state-owned and private sector lenders.

The highest exposure is with State Bank of India at Rs 11,000 crore followed by Yes Bank at Rs 4,000 crore and IndusInd Bank at Rs 3,500 crore. However, in terms of percentage of loan book, the biggest hit from Vodafone Idea’s default will be to IDFC First Bank as it has an exposure of 2.9 per cent of its loan book followed by YES Bank at 2.4 per cent and IndusInd Bank at 1.65 per cent.

According to media reports, IDFC First Bank has already marked Vodafone Idea as stressed and provided for 15 per cent of the outstanding debt.

While Vodafone Idea is a one-off large account instead of the torrent of defaults seen over the past 10 years, it could have a bearing on the earnings performance of these banks in the coming quarters, as they will have to make hefty provisions against these loan accounts.

No surprise then that SBI was the worst Nifty50 performer today, down 3.3 per cent. Shares of IDFC First Bank tanked over 5 per cent, while those of YES Bank 2 per cent.



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KM Birla steps down as non-exec chairman of Voda Idea, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Aditya Birla Group (ABG) chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla has resigned as the non-executive chairman and director of Vodafone Idea (Vi), intensifying the gloom over the cash-strapped telco which has been desperately trying to raise funds and seek government help to survive.

Birla is being replaced by Himanshu Kapania, currently a non-executive director and a former managing director of the erstwhile Idea Cellular before its merger with Vodafone India.

“The Board of Directors of Vodafone Idea Limited, at its meeting held today, have accepted the request of Mr. Kumar Mangalam Birla to step down as Non-Executive Director and Non-Executive Chairman of the Board with effect from close of business hours on 4th August, 2021,” the company said in a notice to stock exchanges on Wednesday.

UK’s Vodafone Group, the co-parent of Vi with a 44.39% stake, declined to comment.

Birla’s announcement – which came after market hours – comes less than two months after he wrote to the government, offering to hand over the group’s 27.66 % stake in Vi to any public sector or domestic financial entity who could keep the company afloat. He had also asserted that without immediate government support, the telco would be driven to an irretrievable point of collapse.

The Vodafone Group didn’t comment on Birla’s letter. But its CEO Nick Read on July 23 – over a month and a half after Birla’s June 7 letter – reiterated UK major’s stance that it won’t infuse any more equity in its Indian JV.

The government hasn’t responded to Birla’s letter. Officials though say that the Centre is preparing a relief package for the telecom sector, which would also benefit Vi. The package could include allowing surrender of spectrum, reduction of bank guarantees, phasing out or reducing levies such as licence fees and spectrum usage charges and prospectively redefine adjusted gross revenue (AGR) to exclude non-telecom items.

Vi’s stock crashed 20% to its 52-week low on Wednesday to Rs 5.94 before ending 18.5% down at Rs 6.03 as investors dumped the company, fearing it is headed for a default and bankruptcy, said market experts. The shares lost Rs 3,936.75 crore in value, a day after losing Rs2,443 crore when the scrip ended 10.3% lower. Contents of the letter were made public on Monday.

Market watchers said the planned relief package won’t address the immediate cash needs of the telco, which is staring at a potential $3.1 billion (Rs 23,500 crore) shortfall in cash flows in FY23, as per Kotak Securities. Vi’s cash balance at March end was Rs 350 crore and its efforts at raising Rs25,000 crore for the last 10 months hasn’t been successful so far.

Birla had taken over as non-executive chairman of Vodafone Idea in August 2018 upon the closure of a $23-billion merger between Idea Cellular and Vodafone India, the telecom unit of Vodafone Group. The merged entity became the country’s largest telco by revenue market share and subscriber share.

But since then, as the two companies worked to integrate the two large telcos, Vodafone Idea rapidly lost both revenue and subscriber market share to rivals Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel.

Its debt ballooned to Rs1.8 lakh crore in the January-March quarter as it borrowed to buy spectrum and invest in its network, at a time revenue was falling sharply, leading to dwindling cash flows and heavy losses. Vi has never reported a quarterly profit since the merger. Its net loss in the January-March quarter was Rs 6,985.1 crore.

The telco was pushed to the brink after the Supreme Court ruled in September 2019 to widen the definition of AGR to include non-telecom items and left Vi with a statutory bill of over Rs58,000 crore. It has paid Rs7854 crore so far, and all its attempts to reduce the AGR bill by legal means has come to nought.

In his letter, Birla said that over the last year, the telco has made all efforts to improve the operational efficiency of the company through prudent capital spending, manpower restructuring, and other cost cutting steps.

“Despite all that, the financial condition (particularly the liquidity position) of the company has sharply deteriorated,” he said.

Birla had also sought positive actions on long standing requests such as clarity on AGR liability, adequate moratorium on spectrum payments, and a floor price regime for investors to have confidence in the sector to invest in Vi. The letter predated last month’s Supreme Court order which dismissed the plea of Vodafone Idea and other telcos to permit rectification of ‘arithmetical errors’ in the computation of AGR dues.

He added that without backing from the government on the three major issues by July 2021, VIL’s financial situation will drive its operations to an “irretrievable point of collapse”.



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Voda Idea lenders fret over ‘too big to fail’ telco giant, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: A day after Kumar Mangalam Birla’s letter warning that Vodafone Idea (VIL) may reach an “irretrievable point of collapse” became public, banks are worried about the fate of the telecom major which, they say, is “too big to fail”.

Lenders, both Indian and global, have an exposure of Rs 1.8 lakh crore. A large part of this is in the form of guarantees. Some private lenders with a funded exposure have already started making provisions. However, the bulk of the exposure is to public sector banks.

If VIL fails to repay its dues to the government and these guarantees are invoked, it would immediately turn into debt and would soon be classified as a non-performing asset. The hit on public sector banks will not be as large as their exposure because in recent years, lenders have been demanding a substantially higher cash margin from Vodafone for their guarantees. IDBI Bank is understood to have up to 40% margins for the guarantees it has extended. But even then it will be large enough to wipe out profits for many.

For banks, recovery of debt is contingent on VIL remaining operational and retaining customers. While the company continues to have close to a fourth of the Indian market, its situation could change overnight if there is a default. According to bankers, the insolvency process can work only when there are buyers. In the case of VIL, the Rs 53,000-crore AGR (adjusted gross revenue) dues to the Centre are a deterrent. This is despite Birla being willing to write down his entire equity.

The government dues cannot be avoided as the Centre cannot make an exception for one company. Even in insolvency cases, the telecom department has claimed its dues to be that of a financial creditor although there have been attempts to mark them as operational creditors. The uncertainty over telecom department’s claims, which is already being experienced by lenders in the Reliance Communication insolvency case, would makes telecom resolutions a challenge. Lenders do not want to risk insolvency as this would result in the exit of customers which was the case with RCom.

Lenders say besides the company’s debt obligations being equal to 1.5% of the banking sector’s credit, VIL is a large telecom infrastructure provider. Several business applications run on their networks and the company is one of the largest providers of “internet of things” service. A bank executive said insolvency would be a worst-case scenario as there is a risk of customers migrating.



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