Blow for RCom as wireless unit merger with Aircel collapses

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Abhirup Roy and Sankalp Phartiyal

(Reuters) - Embattled telecom company Communications Ltd faced another setback on Sunday after deal to merge its wireless business with smaller rival was called off, raising fresh doubts about its debt repayment plans.

The company, widely known as RCom, said it had agreed with to call off the proposed deal due to regulatory delays and legal uncertainties.

has been trying to reduce its debt by 250 billion rupees by merging its wireless business with and by selling stake in its mobile masts arm to unit of Canada's Brookfield Asset Management .

RCom, controlled by billionaire Anil Ambani, had net debt of 443.45 billion rupees ($6.92 billion) at the end of March.

The company has earned temporary reprieve from its lenders, which have agreed to standstill on its debt obligations as part of planned loan restructuring.

The collapsed deal raises further doubts about the company's ability to repay debt, the head of an institutional investor in told Reuters, declining to be identified.

"Will the investors have to take hit? Will there be any kind of haircut to all the lenders in Those questions will also come," the person added.

said in statement it would look to monetize its spectrum through trading and sharing arrangements and continue to implement the monetization of its tower and fiber assets.

The company already shares its airwaves with Jio Infocomm, the network operator backed by Ambani's older brother and India's richest man, Mukesh.

has been hit by free voice and cut-price data plans offered by Jio - the mobile market's newest entrant.

The collapse of the deal with comes after the local arm of Sweden's Ericsson filed plea with an insolvency court against last month.

Ericsson, which signed seven-year deal in 2014 to operate and manage RCom's nationwide network, is seeking total of 11.55 billion rupees from the company and two of its subsidiaries.

Worries over the company's ability to repay debt have led to series of downgrades by ratings agencies and the company's stock has plummeted nearly 44 percent so far this year, compared with nearly 20 percent rise of broader market.

(Reporting by Abhirup Roy and Sankalp Phartiyal; Additional reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Mark Potter)

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First Published: Sun, October 01 2017. 21:24 IST