Supreme Courtroom Rejects Telcos’ Plea on AGR Dues Owed to Authorities

Supreme Courtroom Rejects Telcos’ Plea on AGR Dues Owed to Authorities

India’s prime court docket on Thursday rejected a request by telecom firms to recalculate the dues they owed the federal government, sending shares of debt-saddled Vodafone Concept and its friends down.

Analysts at ICRA estimate that Vodafone Concept and Bharti Airtel owe 1 trillion rupees ($12 billion) in previous dues, together with spectrum prices and licensing charges. They, nonetheless, didn’t make clear the quantity owed by different firms.

The businesses, in a last-resort petition in opposition to the same ruling by the highest court docket in 2021, had argued that the telecom division made errors in calculating the so-called adjusted gross income (AGR) dues.

Telecom corporations had lengthy contested that solely income accrued from core providers ought to be taken into consideration when computing the dues, whereas the federal government argued that AGR ought to embody non-core income as properly, corresponding to cash from lease or land gross sales.

The Supreme Courtroom had, in 2019, dominated in favour of the federal government’s definition of AGR calculations.

The most recent ruling is a setback for Vodafone Concept, which owes the federal government round 700 billion rupees in license charges and spectrum prices, in line with its newest quarterly report.

The Indian authorities can also be one of many largest shareholders within the firm with a 23.1% stake.

Analysts didn’t count on the ruling to have a serious affect on Bharti Airtel as a consequence of its stronger financials.

Shares of Vodafone Concept slumped about 20% after the information, whereas Bharti Airtel briefly turned damaging, however closed 0.6% increased.

“A constructive ruling would have decreased Vodafone’s debt by 350 billion rupees,” mentioned Balaji Subramanian, a analysis analyst at IIFL Securities.

The ruling makes Vodafone’s debt-funding (250 bln rupee) difficult since lesser money move would fear banks about taking publicity to the corporate, he mentioned.

“If the reduction had come, their annual money move can be increased by 80 billion rupees.”

Vodafone Concept and Bharti Airtel didn’t instantly reply to Reuters’ requests for remark.

© Thomson Reuters 2024

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