Airtel to take up its case with govt on AGR waiver
NEW DELHI, Nov. 5 -- A day after the Supreme Court ordered the government to reassess the adjusted gross revenue (AGR) dues from Vodafone Idea for up to FY17, Bharti Airtel will now take up its case with the government for a similar reassessment.
"We welcome the fact that the recent order of the Supreme Court permits the government to undertake a comprehensive assessment, reassessment and reconciliation of the AGR dues including interest and penalties up to the financial year 2016-17. The order has been made in the petition of Vodafone Idea. We are now planning to take up our matter with the government," Bharti Airtel vice chairman and managing director Gopal Vittal told analysts in an earnings call.
Vittal said the the company always maintained that the AGR judgement of 2019 was a "body blow" to the industry. "The fact that even errors of calculation were not entertained is even more disappointing," Vittal said.
Shares of Bharti Airtel were trading at Rs.2,108.80 each in afternoon trades, up 1.66% from opening on the National Stock Exchange. The bourse's benchmark Nifty 50 index was down 0.65%.
AGR represents a portion of a telecom company's gross revenue that is considered for regulatory payments. Telcos pay 8% of AGR as licence fee to the government, inclusive of contribution to the Digital Bharat Nidhi fund, which is at 5% of AGR.
The Supreme Court on Monday clarified that the government could reassess and reconsider all of Vodafone Idea's AGR dues as of FY17, including interest and penalties, delivering significant relief to the cash-strapped telecom company. The order, however, pertains only to Vodafone Idea as other companies did not file any petition in the Supreme Court on the additional AGR demand from DoT for up to FY17 period.
In April, Airtel had urged the department of telecommunications, or DoT, to convert its AGR dues of about Rs.40,000 crore into equity, which would give the government a 3-4% stake in India's second-largest telecom operator.
To be sure, in May, the Supreme Court had dismissed pleas by Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Idea, and Tata Teleservices seeking a waiver on interest, penalty, and interest on penalty on pending AGR dues.
"We just wanted a non-discriminatory level-playing field in terms of an option to convert," Vittal had said then. "Whether we will convert or not is a decision for the board to take. We wanted a clarification from the government whether we had the option or not."
On Monday, the Sunil Bharti Mittal-led telecom operator reported its September-quarter results. The company reported strong earnings driven by a surge in mobile data consumption, an expanding subscriber base, and a recovery in the enterprise segment, Airtel Business, after three quarters of a fall in revenue.
Bharti Airtel reported a revenue of Rs.52,145 crore in the September quarter, rising 25.7% from the previous year, and 5.4% from the preceding quarter's Rs.49,463 crore, according to the company's earnings release. The company's revenue was largely driven by an increase in its mainstay mobile services business, with a focus on premium services and growth in Airtel Africa.
Net profit rose 89% from a year earlier to Rs.6,792 crore, helped by lower losses at its associate and joint ventures during the quarter. A lower finance cost also improved the profit during the quarter. On a sequential basis, Airtel's net profit rose 14.19% from Rs.5,948 crore in the preceding quarter....
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