Norway's Telenor(OSL:TEL.OL - News)
is in talks to merge its Indian operations with Tata Teleservices to
gain a bigger foothold in the world's second-biggest mobile phone
market, a source with direct knowledge of the situation said on Tuesday.
Telenor, which won rights to operate in six Indian
zones in an auction this month after its earlier permits were ordered to
be revoked, is looking to take a majority stake in the merged entity,
the source said.
The deal will see India's Tata Group cutting its stake
in unlisted Tata Teleservices, the country's No. 6 mobile phone carrier,
said the source, declining to be named due to the sensitivity of the
matter.
The merged entity will be ranked No. 5 by customers.
Japan's NTT DoCoMo (TYO:9437), which owns a 26 percent
stake in the company, will retain its holding in the combined entity,
the source said.
Telenor and Tata Teleservices declined comment. NTT
DoCoMo could not immediately be reached for comment in Tokyo outside
their business hours.
With more than 900 million mobile phone customers, India's mobile phone market is second only to China.
The crowded market, which boasted 15 players until the
first half of this year, is ripe for consolidation, analysts have said,
as competition and rising debt levels eat into profit margins.
However, there have been few deals, mainly due to
regulatory uncertainty and strict government rules on ownership and
airwave holdings.
A cabinet decision this month determined that companies
buying a carrier that paid a low state-set price for airwaves must
match a far higher price determined in a recent auction and pay the
difference to the government.
Singapore state investor Temasek owns about 7 percent
of Tata Teleservices, while Indian business man C. Sivasankaran holds
about 8 percent. It was not immediately clear if their holdings would
change if the deal goes through.
Telenor, which earlier operated in 13 Indian telecom
zones, will now be reduced to six zones with 34 million customers, while
Tata Teleservices has permits for all of India's 22 zones.

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