Corrected: Indus Towers, Bharti Infratel merging to become world No.2 for masts

Reuters 

(Adds "Indus Towers" in headline)

BENGALURU/(Reuters) - and agreed to combine operations in a deal that will create the world's second-largest mobile masts company measured by numbers of towers.

The combined company, which will lag only China Tower, will remain listed on Indian bourses. It will have a nationwide presence with more than 163,000 towers, the owners of both companies said in a joint statement on Wednesday.

Top Indian Bharti Airtel, the majority owner of Bharti Infratel, will end up with a stake of 33.8 percent to 37.2 percent in the combined entity, which will be called

separately said it plans to engage with potential investors to evaluate a stake sale in the combined mobile masts entity, which will have an equity value of 965 billion rupees ($14.5 billion), sending the carrier's stock up as much as 5.2 percent.

The tower deal comes ahead of an announced merger of Vodafone Group Plc's Indian unit and which could potentially overtake as India's biggest That deal is set to close in the first half of this year.

Vodafone and Idea, which both own stakes in Indus Towers, had said they would look at selling their stakes in Indus, and also dispose of other tower assets they separately own to help cut debt in the

While mobile masts operators in have benefited from growing demand from carriers that have rolled out high-speed 4G services, they have also lost tenants in some areas as several money-losing carriers shutdown operations.

According to terms of the deal, shareholders of Indus - Bharti Infratel, Vodafone, Idea and private equity firm - will receive 1,565 shares of Bharti Infratel for every share held.

In return for its 42 percent stake in Indus Towers, Vodafone will get between 26.7 percent and 29.4 percent of the Indus-Bharti Infratel combine depending on the options two other shareholders in Indus - Idea and private equity - exercise.

Idea has an option to sell its 11.2 percent stake in Indus for about $1 billion or receive new shares in the combined masts company. has the option to receive cash or shares for 3.35 percent of its 4.85 percent holding in Indus, with the remainder exchanged for shares in the combined tower firm.

The deal is expected to close before end-March next year.

The new board will have 11 members - three each from and Vodafone, one from or and four independent members, the companies said.

and last year bought more than 10 percent of Bharti Infratel.

($1 = 66.5675 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by and Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 25 2018. 12:07 IST