Business Standard August 27, 2001
The Tata group will review
its bid for Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd (VSNL) after the government
spells out its policy on the opening up of the international long
distance (ILD) telephony sector.
"Our final decision on
investing in VSNL will depend on the proposed ILD guidelines on the
licence fee and other parameters. The ILD policy will have a direct
impact on the valuation of VSNL and our plans to enter the sector
through VSNL," a top Tata executive told Business
Standard.
However, the Tata official
maintained that the group does not propose to pull out of the race at
this stage."We are completing the
due diligence process and our intention of entering the sector has
been clear from the beginning. However, the pros and cons will have to
be weighed before we submit the final bid," he said.
The Tatas will not set any
formal condition when the government puts up its white paper on ILD
for discussions. The Centre is expected to come out with a white paper
on the opening up of the ILD sector within a couple of weeks.
Earlier, the government was
planning to release the discussion paper in the fourth quarter of the
current financial year.It is learnt that the VSNL
bidders are pressurising the Centre to hasten the policy decision,
according to a senior VSNL official.
Though the Centre decided to
end VSNL’s monopoly in the international long distance telephony
business during the last fiscal, it never announced a clear policy on
inviting more firms.
Although the VSNL
disinvestment attracted many domestic players initially, a number of
them have since pulled out.
The contenders finally left
in the race are the Reliance group, the Tatas and the BPL-Sterling
consortium.
The delay in announcing the
ILD policy and other matters have already prompted the AV Birla group,
the Bharti-SingTel consortium and Videocon to exit from the race.
Recently, BPL Communications has said that its bid is also under
review.
The expert committee on
Internet telephony set up by the government has already given its
green signal for allowing the service from April next once VSNL loses
its monopoly in international voice traffic.
The committee
has recommended that any licensed ILD/NLD/ISP
operator may be permitted to offer net telephony
service as per licence conditions of the respective
services. This means that the revenue of VSNL
will be shared by all telecom operators.