Acquisition of a controlling stake by an outsider or a sizable
equity infusion by current promoters remains the need of the hour, Credit
Suisse said in its latest note.
A potential
investment by Google
into cash-strapped Vodafone Idea (VIL), if materialises, will be a strategic
positive for the Indian telecom operator, but a five per cent stake would still
be inadequate to solve the telcos' debt problems, analysts said on Friday.
Acquisition of a controlling stake by an outsider or a sizable equity infusion by current promoters remains the need of the hour, Credit Suisse said in its latest note.
Alphabet Inc's
Google is said to be eyeing about 5 per cent stake in VIL, the Financial Times
had reported on Thursday. Such an investment in VIL will pit the search giant
against Facebook which has picked up a stake in Jio Platforms, the firm that
houses India's youngest but biggest telecom company - Reliance Jio.
Google investment
into VIL can be incrementally positive, but a 5 per cent stake is unlikely to
move the needle or provide any meaningful relief to VIL's debt problems, said
Credit Suisse.
"We think
unless Google (or any other external investor) looks at acquiring a controlling
stake in VIL, the chances of company's long term survival beyond FY23 (when the
moratorium on deferred spectrum debt ends) appears to be low," it said.
Goldman Sachs said
that at Vodafone
Idea's current market cap, a 5 per cent stake would be valued at USD 100
million or less than one per cent of the company's USD 14 billion-outstanding
net debt as of December 2019.
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