Anil Ambani's RCom, GCX ratings unaffected by debt restructuring: Fitch

Rcom said it has made a comprehensive 'debt resolution plan to its domestic and foreign lenders'

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

A man walks past a logo of Reliance Communication before the Annual General Meeting in Mumbai. Photo: Reuters
A man walks past a logo of Reliance Communication before the Annual General Meeting in Mumbai. Photo: Reuters

The ratings on and its subsidiary will be "unaffected" by the debt restructuring plan outlined by the company, according to

Re-rating will happen after clarity on the execution of the sale of its assets and the capital structure of the revamped entity, it added.

Earlier this week, billionaire Anil Ambani-led said lenders will convert part of their debt to equity to gain 51 per cent control of the company.

The debt-laden firm, which plans to shut mobile telephony business by November-end, will sell telecom tower and real estate businesses to pay off Rs 27,000 crore out of Rs 45,000 crore of loan on its books.

said it has made a comprehensive "debt resolution plan to its domestic and foreign lenders".

"The ratings on Limited (RCom, Restricted Default) and its wholly-owned subsidiary (GCX, B-/Negative) will be unaffected by Rcom's debt restructuring plan," said in a statement.

The ratings on are driven by its "relatively weak" trading position and its liquidity, it said cautioning that reduction of its cash balance to below $40 million could lead to negative rating action.

"We expect to re-rate once there is clarity on the execution of the sale of its assets and the capital structure of the reorganised entity," it added.

Fitch further said it expectsRcom to gradually exit from the wireless voice business and significantly scale down its operations due to intense competition.

"We expect the restructuring to transform from an integrated telecom company to a business-to-business bandwidth services provider with three segments - GCX, enterprise and data centre business," the statement said.

But Fitch felt that even after the restructuring, will not benefit from GCX's cash flows "which are largely ring-fenced under its $350 million senior secured bond documents".

First Published: Wed, November 01 2017. 12:32 IST