ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Saturday, 22 November 2008 19:25 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /

Print this page Print this page | Email this to a friend Email this to a friend | Discuss this article (0 Comments) |

Essar may seek to raise Hutch stake

by Reuters on Tuesday, 20 February 2007

India's Essar Group - which owns 33% of India's number four mobile carrier, Hutchison Essar - may seek to raise its stake in the company, and wants joint management status after Vodafone completes its buyout of the remaining 67% of the firm.

British-based Vodafone reached an $11.1 billion deal last week to buy a controlling stake in Hutchison Essar from Hong Kong-based Hutchison Telecom International Ltd.

Since then it has held discussions with the Ruia family which controls Essar about a possible partnership. It has also offered to buy the Indian group's stake at the price it paid Hutchison, but Essar has said it wants to stay on in the fast-growing telecoms industry.

Story continues below
advertisement

"We are not just a portfolio investor. We want joint management of the joint venture," Vikash Saraf, chief executive of Essar's telecoms business, told Reuters in an interview on Monday in Mumbai. "We may seek higher shareholding."

His boss Prashant Ruia, a director of the group and the son of Essar group chairman and founder, said in a separate interview in London that Essar could bring its knowledge of the Indian market to its future partnership with Vodafone.

"They (Vodafone) have a huge amount of experience in developed markets. But when it comes to emerging markets we have a lot of experience because we have been involved in it for the last 11 years. We understand India. It is a good combination for building value in the future," Ruia said.

Ruia rejected media reports that Essar was angling for a price higher than what the UK group plans to pay Hutchison, and that it was a troublesome partner, as speculative and wrong.

Essar has consistently maintained that it had the right of first refusal if Hutchison were to sell its stake, a claim Hutchison says only applied in the case of local firms.

Essar and Hutchison had been locked in disputes in recent years, most notably over the merger of the assets of rival group BPL's assets into Hutch Essar and the Hong Kong-based group's decision to bring Egypt's Orascom Telecom as a shareholder into a the holding company that controls Hutch Essar.

The Essar group bought the operations of BPL in July 2005 and sold all but one to Hutch Essar. It says the government blocked a deal for BPL's Mumbai operations as both BPL and Hutch Essar were dominant players in the same market.

That was disputed by Hutchison and led to worsening relations between the two partners, and eventually the Hong Kong-based group's decision to exit the business.

Ruia downplayed suggestions Essar's partnership with Hutchison was unsuccessful, saying that in seven years the sides managed to raise Hutch Essar's valuation to $18.8 billion including debt from just $800 million.

Ruia said details of the group's role in the partnership with Vodafone, including the number of directorships or its branding, were yet to be discussed, although talks would cover the status of the BPL operation in Mumbai.

"That (BPL) could be one of the areas which would need to be ironed out... It has to be. It will be," he said.

Ruia said the Essar group, which also was one of the bidders to buy the controlling stake in Hutch Essar, was keen for a "constructive partnership" with Vodafone.

Vodafone Chief Executive Arun Sarin held talks with the Ruia family in Mumbai last week, following which the Essar group announced its intention to stay on in the business.

India is the world's fastest-growing major mobile phone market, and the acquisition is expected to help offset slowing growth in Vodafone's core European operations.

Hutchison Essar added 1.11 million customers in January, lifting its user base to 24.41 million.

Print Print | Email Email | Discuss this article |


READERS' COMMENTS



Click here to post a comment


Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments
Security Code * Code


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.


MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. Essar Group

  2. Banking & Finance


EMIRATES ID DOWNLOAD

READER COMMENTS

  1. Lenders ramp up interest rates on home loans 1
    21 Nov ' 08 at 21:41
    All over, they are lowering interest rates. If they increase rates here and try to fleece those who trusted in them, it's a good reason...  More »
  2. Saudi prince ups stake in US banking giant 1
    22 Nov ' 08 at 11:39
    I spoke too soon...yesterday Citigroup traded below $4 a share. Hopefully after the Prince made his announcement he did not jump in a...  More »
Read all user comments >

BUSINESS FEATURES

Sukuk and the city

The City of London has had a rough time recently, but for the city's Islamic financiers, outlook looks rosier.

The new colour of Islamic money

Islamic banks are moving to centre stage as they bid to take market share from conventional lenders.

Banks hoard Fed cuts

Regional mortgage lenders are refusing to pass falling US interest rates on to customers in the emirates.

BUSINESS INTERVIEWS

Comeback kids

Arabian Business talks to Unicorn's CFO to discover why Islamic finance is now in higher demand than ever.

Noor goes moor

Noor Islamic Bank CEO Hussain Al Qemzi plans to take the fledgling bank across the Gulf and around the world.

Why there's life after Lehman

As global markets go into freefall, where will sovereign funds be looking next? Makram Azar explains.

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM