Wednesday, June 26, 2013
To India via Singapore : Vedomosti
June 25, 2013
Sistema Shyam Teleservices Ltd 100 per cent of the preference shares (6 million in total) has been acquired for 1.05bn dollars by Insitel, a subsidiary of the Singapore-registered Insitel company.
Sistema Shyam Teleservices Ltd (SSTL), a subsidiary of AFK Sistma, has allotted all of its inconvertible redeemable preference shares, according to a report on a website run by SSTL minority shareholders. The report says that as of March 31, 2013, 100 per cent of the preference shares (6 million in total) has been acquired for 1.05bn dollars by Insitel, a subsidiary of the Singapore-registered Insitel company. The company is an AFK fund which the holding uses to refinance SSTL debt, Sistema representative Yuliya Belous has said. She has also confirmed that all SSTL preference shares have been allotted.
SSA Fund is listed in Sistema reporting as a creditor; in December 2012 the fund issued a call loan of 17.2bn roubles (565.9m dollars) to Sistema. The same registration address in Singapore is used by the TCF Projects fund, which is 100-per-cent owned by Sistema, according to AFK reports. The fund appeared on the list of Sistema affiliated entities only in late 2012. In the Q1 2013 report its book value was estimated at 36.7bn roubles (1.12bn dollars at the Central Bank exchange rate on Saturday). This is one of Sistema’s three largest financial investments reflected in its reports, along with the MTS shares (205bn roubles) and Bashneft stock (215bn roubles).
The allotment of preference shares took SSTL a year to complete; the decision to increase the company’s authorized capital was made by the shareholders meeting on 30 March 2012. The inconvertible preference shares, which the company will have to redeem after 10 years, are essentially a form of loan financing, a source at AFK explains. He says that this is a way of attracting foreign financing without violating the restrictions on the share of foreign capital in telecommunications companies (see insert).
Belous says that Sistema uses both of the Singapore-registered companies to refinance SSTL debt. He explains that when AFK founded TCF Projects, it invested a large sum of money which matches the size of the SSTL debt guaranteed by Sistema. Later on TCF Projects set up SSA Fund, whose Indian subsidiary has now bought all SSTL preference shares. The leftover funds were returned by SSA Fund to Sistema as a call loan. Singapore is a transparent jurisdiction, which also happens to offer very favourable terms for investment in India because it has a double taxation avoidance agreement with the country, says Belous.
SSTL was planning to use the money generated by the allotment of preference shares to partially refinance its debt portfolio by repaying high-interest loans, according to Belous. He says that some of the money has already been used to finance operational costs. Morgan Stanley analysts had previously estimated SSTL’s annual operational costs at 300m dollars.
The buy-back program began in September 2012, when SSTL debt stood at 1.7bn dollars, says Belous. According to AFK reporting, as of March 31 2013 SSTL had 853m dollars of outstanding debt. This means that the company has spent about 850m dollars of the money received from the allotment of preference shares on refinancing, and another 200m dollars on operational costs.
The refinancing operation was carried out amid the crisis that broke out on the Indian telecoms market last year. On 2 February 2012 the Indian High Court annulled 122 spectrum licences issued in 2008 to 11 operators, including 21 out of the 22 licenses owned by SSTL. The court had decided that the procedure for awarding the spectrum licences was not sufficiently transparent, and that the prices paid for the licences were too low, ordering the government to hold a new auction. That auction was held in March 2013; SSTL has won eight licences, and can now continue to operate in nine out of India's 22 telecoms districts.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
SSTL allots 60 Lac (6 million ) preference shares to a private indian company for INR 10000 per share and has raised 6000 crores ( $1.05Billion)
The Shareholding Pattern of Preference Share Capital of the Company as on March 31, 2013 :
No. of Shares (Face value of Rs.10/- per share)
|
% Holding
| |
INSITEL Services Private Limited
|
6,000,000
|
100%
|
TOTAL
|
6,000,000
|
100%
|
The above shares have been issued at a premium of INR 9990
As per information available with us, INSITEL is held primarily by
SSA FUND (SINCAPORE) PTE.
LIMITED
80 RAFFLES PLACE, #32-OI
UOB PLAZA, DOWNTOWN
SINGAPORE.
SINGAPORE-48624
LIMITED
80 RAFFLES PLACE, #32-OI
UOB PLAZA, DOWNTOWN
SINGAPORE.
SINGAPORE-48624
The latest Equity Share Capital structure and holding summary is given here below:
SUMMARY OF LATEST SHAREHOLDING PATTERN (EQUITY) OF SSTL
| |||
CLASS OF SHAREHOLDER
|
NO. OF SHARES
|
AMOUNT (Rs)
|
% of Holding
|
Sistema JSFC, Russia
|
1,810,289,400.00
|
18,102,894,000
|
56.68
|
Promoters (Indian)
|
766,575,760.00
|
7,665,757,600
|
24.00
|
Rosimushchestvo
(Federal Agency for State Property Management of Russian Federation) |
547,312,918.00
|
5,473,129,180
|
17.14
|
Others
|
69,741,922.00
|
697,419,220
|
2.18
|
TOTAL
|
3,193,920,000.00
|
31,939,200,000
|
100.00
|
Total Indian
|
831,988,061.00
|
8,319,880,610
|
26.05
|
Total Foreign
|
2,361,931,939.00
|
23,619,319,390
|
73.95
|
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
SSTL strategy for future....
Download pdf presentation from
http://www.sistema.com/media/439243/sstl_strategy_update.pdf
http://www.sistema.com/media/439243/sstl_strategy_update.pdf
SSTL EBITDA halves to INR 278 cr YOY dring Dec quarter
New Delhi:
Indian telecom arm of Russian conglomerate Sistema, Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL), today reported reduction in net loss at Rs.
778.7 crore for the quarter ended December 31, 2012, when the company
was facing uncertainty over its operations in the country.
The company had reported a net loss of Rs. 1,197.7 crore during the same quarter a year ago.
"The net income benefitted due to improvement in OIBDA (operating income before depreciation and amortization) but the impact was completely offset by the unfavorable movement in exchange rate," Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL) said in a statement.
This, it said, resulted in recording forex losses with respect to long term foreign currency denominated loans, as the rupee depreciated against the dollar at the end of the quarter.
The operating income before depreciation and amortisation (OIBDA) loss of the company almost halved to Rs. 278.6 crore during the reported quarter from Rs. 569 crore in the year-ago period.
"During the quarter the company continued to take steps to reduce its cash outgo. SSTL recorded its lowest full year OIBDA loss in the last three years," SSTL chief financial officer Sergey Savchenko said.
All but one licence of the SSTL were cancelled by the Supreme Court in February, 2012 along with 101 other 2G telecom licences.
The company had to bid for fresh spectrum in March 2013 to continue its operations.
"During the quarter, our focus was on retaining subscribers, controlling expenses and preparing for auctions," Sistema Shyam Teleservices' President and chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov said.
SSTL's data card subscriber base for the quarter declined by 2 per cent to 1.78 million subscribers due to uncertainties and the new regulatory requirements for customer registration, the statement said.
Following auctions, SSTL secured spectrum in eight circles --Delhi, Kolkata, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh (West) & West Bengal -- for Rs. 3,639 crore.
"With Rajasthan circle also a part of SSTL's footprint, we will be able to potentially service 40 per cent of country's population, address around 60 per cent of data business potential and safeguard 75 per cent of our current revenues," Rozanov said.
The revenue of the firm during the last quarter of 2012 declined marginally by 0.54 per cent at Rs. 390.2 crore from Rs. 392.3 crore it reported at the end of corresponding period in 2011.
For the year ended December 31, SSTL net loss reduced to Rs. 2,982.1 crore from Rs. 3,531.4 crore it posted in previous fiscal.
The OIBDA loss of the company narrowed to Rs. 1,445.6 crore on annual basis from Rs. 1,892.7 crore at the end of 2011.
The annual income of the company increased by 31 per cent at Rs. 1,619.2 crore in 2012 from Rs. 1,234.9 crore in 2011.
The total capital expenditure investments made by SSTL in India at the end of December 31, stood at Rs. 6,568 crore. This included investment of Rs. 18.2 crore made during fourth quarter of 2012.
Consolidated debt from banks and financial institutions at the end of December 31, 2012 stood at Rs. 5,670 crore, it said.
The company had reported a net loss of Rs. 1,197.7 crore during the same quarter a year ago.
"The net income benefitted due to improvement in OIBDA (operating income before depreciation and amortization) but the impact was completely offset by the unfavorable movement in exchange rate," Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL) said in a statement.
This, it said, resulted in recording forex losses with respect to long term foreign currency denominated loans, as the rupee depreciated against the dollar at the end of the quarter.
The operating income before depreciation and amortisation (OIBDA) loss of the company almost halved to Rs. 278.6 crore during the reported quarter from Rs. 569 crore in the year-ago period.
"During the quarter the company continued to take steps to reduce its cash outgo. SSTL recorded its lowest full year OIBDA loss in the last three years," SSTL chief financial officer Sergey Savchenko said.
All but one licence of the SSTL were cancelled by the Supreme Court in February, 2012 along with 101 other 2G telecom licences.
The company had to bid for fresh spectrum in March 2013 to continue its operations.
"During the quarter, our focus was on retaining subscribers, controlling expenses and preparing for auctions," Sistema Shyam Teleservices' President and chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov said.
SSTL's data card subscriber base for the quarter declined by 2 per cent to 1.78 million subscribers due to uncertainties and the new regulatory requirements for customer registration, the statement said.
Following auctions, SSTL secured spectrum in eight circles --Delhi, Kolkata, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh (West) & West Bengal -- for Rs. 3,639 crore.
"With Rajasthan circle also a part of SSTL's footprint, we will be able to potentially service 40 per cent of country's population, address around 60 per cent of data business potential and safeguard 75 per cent of our current revenues," Rozanov said.
The revenue of the firm during the last quarter of 2012 declined marginally by 0.54 per cent at Rs. 390.2 crore from Rs. 392.3 crore it reported at the end of corresponding period in 2011.
For the year ended December 31, SSTL net loss reduced to Rs. 2,982.1 crore from Rs. 3,531.4 crore it posted in previous fiscal.
The OIBDA loss of the company narrowed to Rs. 1,445.6 crore on annual basis from Rs. 1,892.7 crore at the end of 2011.
The annual income of the company increased by 31 per cent at Rs. 1,619.2 crore in 2012 from Rs. 1,234.9 crore in 2011.
The total capital expenditure investments made by SSTL in India at the end of December 31, stood at Rs. 6,568 crore. This included investment of Rs. 18.2 crore made during fourth quarter of 2012.
Consolidated debt from banks and financial institutions at the end of December 31, 2012 stood at Rs. 5,670 crore, it said.
Sistema projectsSSTL to be EBITDA positive in 2 years and may consider an IPO
Sistema may spend $1 bn more in India in search of profit
Sistema Shyam TeleServices plans to make the investment through 2015, with $415 mn being spent this year
A file photo of SSTL’s chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov. Sistema’s India unit now projects operating income before depreciation and amortization to become positive in about two years, Rozanov said. Photo: S. Kumar/Mint
Moscow: Russian billionaire Vladimir Evtushenkov’s AFK Sistema, which has written off about a third of its $2.8 billion investment in Indian mobile services, plans to spend as much as $1 billion more to expand in the market.
“The company’s Sistema Shyam TeleServices Ltd (SSTL) unit plans to make the investment through 2015, with $415 million being spent this year,” SSTL chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov
told reporters in Moscow on Tuesday. That includes interest costs,
capital expenditures, covering losses and possibly developing faster
wireless services using LTE technology, he said.
Sistema’s five-year campaign to benefit from growth in
India’s mobile-phone market has so far failed to add to earnings amid
intense competition. The India unit now projects operating income before
depreciation and amortization to become positive in about two years,
and it may consider market consolidation or an initial public offering
once profitable, Rozanov said.
SSTL’s fourth-quarter net loss narrowed to Rs.779 crore, the unit said on Tuesday in a statement. Sistema, which controls Russia’s largest mobile operator OAO Mobile TeleSystems or MTS,
with 101 million users at the end of 2012, entered India five years ago
via a joint venture with local Shyam Group. The Russian government
acquired a 17% stake in SSTL two years ago.
Sistema, based in Moscow, fell 1.7% to 25.50 rubles at 2.52pm local time.
License challenges
Last year, India’s Supreme Court cancelled 122 permits
held by telecommunications operators in the country as the government
sought to auction these licenses again at a higher price, citing
corruption during their original allocation.
Sistema skipped a November auction, which collected less
than a quarter of the government’s $7.3 billion target. It was the only
bidder in a repeated auction in March this year, when India agreed to
lower prices for the remaining spectrum. SSTL, which earlier had a
pan-Indian license, decided to stay in nine out of 22 regions, servicing
40% of the country’s population.
SSTL agreed to pay about $665 million for 20-year
licenses for 800 megahertz spectrum, Sistema said in a 11 March
statement. The $297 million paid by Sistema in 2008 for the same
licenses will count toward the total and the remainder may be paid
during 10 years starting in 2016, according to the statement.
Evtushenkov, with wealth valued at $6.7 billion by Forbes
magazine, made his money in telecommunications. MTS accounts for about
36% of AFK Sistema’s revenue and 62% of the company’s operating income
before depreciation and amortization, according to third-quarter
presentation. Sistema also controls oil producer OAO Bashneft.BLOOMBERG
Kartikay Mehrotra in New Delhi contributed to this story.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Sistema to rebuild MTS brand, to step up marketing spending
Russian conglomerate Sistema will increase marketing spends to rebuild its MTS telecom brand in India, executives said.
KOLKATA: Russian conglomerate Sistema will increase marketing spends to rebuild its MTS
telecom brand in India, two executives aware of the matter have said.
The executives, who did not want to be named, said Sistema's Indian arm,
Sistema Shyam Teleservices,
will increase media spends in 2013 "by at least 20% to strengthen
performance and customer appeal of the MTS brand across its nine-circle
footprint".
The development follows an internal company email, a copy of which was reviewed by ET, in which Sistema's global head of telecom assets, Anton Abugov, has told all Sistema Shyam employees that "the uncertain times are finally over for the company and work needs to be done to replicate the success of brand MTS in Russia and CIS countries in India". Sistema Shyam's spokesman did not respond to ET's emailed query on the size of the brand-building budget. The telecom operator, which offers CDMA services under the MTS brand, was among the worst hit in the February 2012 Supreme Court order in the 2G-spectrum allocation case. Earlier this month, it won permits in eight zones in a government-conducted auction of airwaves.
Abugov has also assured the 2,500 employees of Sistema Shyam that the company will go flat out to return to profitability. "There is a sea of opportunity across all revenue lines — be it voice, data and smart phones — which calls for absolute commitment to optimise all available resources," the email said.
The executives quoted above said the company is likely to implement the "key learnings on the quality and innovation front" that have made MTS the top GSM technology-based mobile services brand in Russia and key CIS markets like Ukraine, Armenia, Belarus and Turkmenistan. They clarified that the international brand-related learnings would be adapted to the company's CDMA operations in India.
Vsevolod Rozanov, president & CEO of Sistema Shyam, said, "Year 2012 was a challenging year for us. But with the uncertainties over, SSTL will concentrate its energies and resources to effectively execute its data-centric, voice-enabled strategy." Rozanov declined to reveal investment numbers.
The decision to commit fresh resources is being viewed by some as the company's plans to start afresh in India. Sistema had said in June last year that it would cease all investments in its voice business in India and focus on data services. The company was then reportedly losing $1.5 million a day in the country.
The development follows an internal company email, a copy of which was reviewed by ET, in which Sistema's global head of telecom assets, Anton Abugov, has told all Sistema Shyam employees that "the uncertain times are finally over for the company and work needs to be done to replicate the success of brand MTS in Russia and CIS countries in India". Sistema Shyam's spokesman did not respond to ET's emailed query on the size of the brand-building budget. The telecom operator, which offers CDMA services under the MTS brand, was among the worst hit in the February 2012 Supreme Court order in the 2G-spectrum allocation case. Earlier this month, it won permits in eight zones in a government-conducted auction of airwaves.
Abugov has also assured the 2,500 employees of Sistema Shyam that the company will go flat out to return to profitability. "There is a sea of opportunity across all revenue lines — be it voice, data and smart phones — which calls for absolute commitment to optimise all available resources," the email said.
The executives quoted above said the company is likely to implement the "key learnings on the quality and innovation front" that have made MTS the top GSM technology-based mobile services brand in Russia and key CIS markets like Ukraine, Armenia, Belarus and Turkmenistan. They clarified that the international brand-related learnings would be adapted to the company's CDMA operations in India.
Vsevolod Rozanov, president & CEO of Sistema Shyam, said, "Year 2012 was a challenging year for us. But with the uncertainties over, SSTL will concentrate its energies and resources to effectively execute its data-centric, voice-enabled strategy." Rozanov declined to reveal investment numbers.
The decision to commit fresh resources is being viewed by some as the company's plans to start afresh in India. Sistema had said in June last year that it would cease all investments in its voice business in India and focus on data services. The company was then reportedly losing $1.5 million a day in the country.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Sistema sets its sights on data
Sistema sets its sights on data
It is back in the fray with a plan to offer 4G services, but its limited reserve of spectrum may play spoilsport
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It was slated to be the next big telecom battle. And this slugfest, focused on high-speed data on LTE 4G networks, as everybody had predicted, was supposed to be a three-way fight with Bharti Airtel, Reliance and Aircel pitted against each other.
However, on Monday, Russia's Sistema shook things up further by declaring its intention to roll out 4G LTE services on the 800 MHz band, the first and perhaps the only player in the country to do so.
The announcement came soon after its Indian joint venture, Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL), the sole bidder in the 800 MHz CDMA auction, won the spectrum in eight circles for Rs 3,639 crore. Sistema said it picked up only those circles that have a sizeable (over 60 per cent) share of the country's data market.
However, it might be a while before Sistema launches its LTE 4G services. With the LTE 4G market still in its infancy, new players, which also includes Videocon, are unlikely to be in any hurry to launch their services. RIL, which has chosen the 2300 MHz band for 4G, is going slow on the launch and the launch is not expected until the end of the year. Airtel is off the ground but is moving with measured steps and has so far launched services only in select cities. SSTL, too, will be following their lead.
Says its soft-spoken president & chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov: "We are looking at a time zone of two to four years before we launch 4G LTE services. We have to first work out a business case for it. But our focus will be on driving data services, though we cannot live without voice".
Sistema, which lost its licences in 2012 after the Supreme Court cancelled all licences issued by former telecom minister A Raja following allegations of fraud, has been treading cautiously. It bid for only those circles that measured up to its parameters on pricing, spectrum availability and the data potential of the market.
Win some, lose some
It has resulted in the company shrinking its operations substantially. From being a pan-India player, it has now cut its operations to just nine circles (including Rajasthan). As a result, its subscriber base has fallen sharply. It is expected to fall by another 3.5 million after it shuts operations in three more old circles. However, that may not be a huge loss for the company as its new nine circles make up for 75 per cent of its current revenue.
Sistema had to do some tough juggling to ensure it did not miss out on new data opportunity while keeping its budget in check. For instance, Rozanov says that while Mumbai has a large data market, spectrum price was prohibitive (base price constituted 24 per cent of the total price of the eleven circles it had earlier decided to bid for) and, therefore, he decided to give the city a miss and instead use the amount to buy spectrum in five other circles with good potential in the data market. Similarly, it wanted to be in Andhra Pradesh, but decided against it as enough spectrum was not available to provide both quality data as well as voice services.
Rozanov's immediate focus is to push data usage through smartphones. He hopes to leverage on the fact that he will be able to double his tower capacity (he has more spectrum now) to handle data, which will mean improved services and higher data speeds.
At present, 20 to 22 per cent of SSTL's revenues come from data, 90 per cent of which is through dongle subscribers and the share of smartphones is near negligible. "Our challenge would be to increase usage on smartphones and create more applications," he says.
However, on Monday, Russia's Sistema shook things up further by declaring its intention to roll out 4G LTE services on the 800 MHz band, the first and perhaps the only player in the country to do so.
The announcement came soon after its Indian joint venture, Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL), the sole bidder in the 800 MHz CDMA auction, won the spectrum in eight circles for Rs 3,639 crore. Sistema said it picked up only those circles that have a sizeable (over 60 per cent) share of the country's data market.
However, it might be a while before Sistema launches its LTE 4G services. With the LTE 4G market still in its infancy, new players, which also includes Videocon, are unlikely to be in any hurry to launch their services. RIL, which has chosen the 2300 MHz band for 4G, is going slow on the launch and the launch is not expected until the end of the year. Airtel is off the ground but is moving with measured steps and has so far launched services only in select cities. SSTL, too, will be following their lead.
Says its soft-spoken president & chief executive officer Vsevolod Rozanov: "We are looking at a time zone of two to four years before we launch 4G LTE services. We have to first work out a business case for it. But our focus will be on driving data services, though we cannot live without voice".
Sistema, which lost its licences in 2012 after the Supreme Court cancelled all licences issued by former telecom minister A Raja following allegations of fraud, has been treading cautiously. It bid for only those circles that measured up to its parameters on pricing, spectrum availability and the data potential of the market.
Win some, lose some
It has resulted in the company shrinking its operations substantially. From being a pan-India player, it has now cut its operations to just nine circles (including Rajasthan). As a result, its subscriber base has fallen sharply. It is expected to fall by another 3.5 million after it shuts operations in three more old circles. However, that may not be a huge loss for the company as its new nine circles make up for 75 per cent of its current revenue.
Sistema had to do some tough juggling to ensure it did not miss out on new data opportunity while keeping its budget in check. For instance, Rozanov says that while Mumbai has a large data market, spectrum price was prohibitive (base price constituted 24 per cent of the total price of the eleven circles it had earlier decided to bid for) and, therefore, he decided to give the city a miss and instead use the amount to buy spectrum in five other circles with good potential in the data market. Similarly, it wanted to be in Andhra Pradesh, but decided against it as enough spectrum was not available to provide both quality data as well as voice services.
Rozanov's immediate focus is to push data usage through smartphones. He hopes to leverage on the fact that he will be able to double his tower capacity (he has more spectrum now) to handle data, which will mean improved services and higher data speeds.
At present, 20 to 22 per cent of SSTL's revenues come from data, 90 per cent of which is through dongle subscribers and the share of smartphones is near negligible. "Our challenge would be to increase usage on smartphones and create more applications," he says.
Globally, 800 MHz is becoming a popular band for rolling out LTE 4G services, especially in Europe. At present, there are more LTE 4G services in the 1800 MHz band (about 40 per cent of the network), but the 800 MHz band is fast catching up. There are over 70 devices and 4G phones which run on the band, despite prohibitive prices.
But unlike India, the UK and other countries have offered at least 10 MHz of spectrum in the band to start with. Sistema's challenge becomes even more acute as its competitors in India- Reliance and Airtel- have plenty of spectrum, 20 MHz each in the 2300 MHz band. It simply means they can offer more bandwidth at higher speeds to customers.
Rozanov admits that for LTE 4G services the minimum spectrum needed is at least 5MHz, but in many circles like Delhi and Mumbai there is no scope to get that much spectrum for lack of availability. He is pinning his hopes on the example of Metro PC in the US, which has been able to offer services with limited amount of spectrum.
In addition to that Sistema also has some advantages over its Indian rivals in the 2300 MHz band. For one, 800 MHz being a low frequency spectrum is more efficient and gives an operator wider coverage and better indoor coverage, which is critical for data services, which are mainly used in offices and homes. It also means lower investment as fewer towers are required to cover the same area. The savings in investment would mean it has more leeway in pricing its products or improving margins.
However, competitors say the advantages do not give Sistema an edge. They say that while initially operators in the 2300 MHz band will have to make higher investment than those in the 800 MHz, in the long run they will score over Sistema as it will have to invest in towers continuously to support more subscribers. "So while we make the investment up front, they will to do it over a period of time, " says a senior executive of a rival operator.
Divided opinion
The opinion, of course, is divided on Sistema's future. Analysts say Sistema can get over the problem of limited spectrum in the 800 MHz band by following the global model-offering LTE 4G services across various spectrums, with consumers moving seamlessly from one band to another without them knowing. "Sistema could buy more spectrum in the 700 MHz or in other bands to resolve the spectrum limitation."
For now though, Sistema does not have to make any major investments. It has to pay for the new spectrum in installments and the money that it paid earlier to acquire the spectrum will be adjusted in the price. Also, it does not have to pay anything till March 2016. And after that it has to pay Rs 200 crore every year for ten years.
It could also redeploy its towers and equipment in the eight closed circles to support its network in the new circles. The company has 18,000 towers and equipment in the closed circles.
But can Sistema take on the expected aggressive challenge from Reliance or Airtel? Says Rozanov: "At the moment, I don't even know the 2300 MHz business case, but in the few areas like Kolkata or Pune that Airtel has launched, we are not threatened."
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Sistema to start 4G LTE services in direct competition with Reliance Jio....
SSTL said in a global statement on Monday: “Spectrum in the eight circles is technologically neutral and valid for 20 years. This provides an opportunity to strengthen SSTL’s data-driven strategy through a possible LTE rollout in the future.”
The company’s entry in LTE services would pit it against Reliance Jio — which is likely to launch 4G services with its pan-Indian 2,300-MHz spectrum by the end of the year — besides Bharti Airtel, Aircel and Videocon.
inputs from Business standard
Monday, March 11, 2013
SISTEMA ANNOUNCES RESULTS OF INDIAN LICENCES AUCTION
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Pass on Benefit of any Spectrum Price Cut: Sistema to DoT
Pass on Benefit of any Spectrum Price Cut: Sistema to DoT
JOJI THOMAS PHILIP NEW DELHI : ET
Russia’s Sistema has demanded that any cut in base price for airwaves in auctions should be extended to it, a move that may thwart the Centre’s efforts at slashing the reserve price for third round of spectrum auctions. Sistema-Shyam (SSTL), which offers mobile phone services under the MTS brand on the CDMA technology platform, is the lone participant in the second round of airwaves sale that begins on March 11. The Centre was forced to restrict the upcoming spectrum auctions to just the 800 MHz band used by CDMA operators as there were no bidders for the other frequencies. The government had earlier planned to sell unsold spectrum in the 1800 MHz band from last year’s auctions in four circles — Delhi, Mumbai, Karnataka and Rajasthan — along with a portion of airwaves held by incumbent operators in the 900 MHz band, during the March 2013 sale.
The Supreme Court had directed the government last week to sell all airwaves vacated by companies whose permits were quashed by the apex court in February last year and the move has forced the government to go in for a third round of airwaves sales, the timelines for which are yet to be finalised.
“Our participation in the ensuing auction is with a clear understanding that the relative price band will not be disturbed. Fairness and equity warrants that in the event Government of India takes a decision to reduce the reserve price in any of the 2G bands, the benefit of the price so reduced be extended to Sistema-Shyam by way of refund, adjustment on the excessive price paid by SSTL,” the company said in a March 4 communication to the telecom department.
Sistema said the decision to participate in the March 11 auctions were taken with ‘huge pain’, as it had to ‘simultaneously decide on closure of operations in other circles’ where it decided not to play a part in the airwaves sale. “We had to shrink our footprint as the reserve price has been so steep and not making any economic sense. The decision to close some of these circles are primarily due to the high reserve price, causing inconvenience to customers, loss of jobs for direct and indirect employees, loss of capital employed, huge dent on the image of Sistema, directly impacting the MTS brand,” the company’s communication added. Sistema’s communication comes even as the panel of ministers on spectrum headed by finance minister P Chidambaram is looking at reducing the base price for the third round of spectrum auctions. The empowered group of ministers on Wednesday decided that it would decide on base price for airwaves with regard to future auctions only after the conclusion of the March 11 sale.
Sistema further said that India was a highly competitive market and relative advantage or disadvantage in spectrum prices had huge financial impact on companies. “We once again reiterate that the telecom department should consider reduction in reserve price for 800 MHz spectrum in case it is considering reduction in 1800 MHz and 900 MHz irrespective of participation in auction for the 800 MHz band,” the company said.
SistemaShyam, which has a customer base of over 14 million across 22 circles, had lost 21 of its mobile permits in the February 2012 Supreme Court order in the 2G-spectrum allocation case that impacted several operators. The company, which is the sole telecom operator in the country that uses only 800 MHz for its services, had stayed away from the first round of spectrum auctions in November citing high reserve price.
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A BLOG FOR ALL THE SHAREHOLDERS OF SSTL (FORMERLY SHYAMTELELINK LTD) TO COME TOGETHER AND DISCUSS ISSUES OF COMMON INTEREST. YOU CAN REACH US AT AMSOST@GMAIL.COM