Business
Net bids in India's spectrum auction at Rs.109,874 crore
New Delhi, March 25
The e-auction of radio
frequency spectrum, or airwaves, for telecom operators concluded
Wednesday after 19 days and 115 rounds of rigorous bidding with
officials placing the provisional estimate of commitments at Rs.109,874
crore -- the highest ever.
"At the end of 115th round, about 89
percent of the spectrum has been provisionally allocated to the bidders.
The provisional amount committed by bidders at the end of 115th round
is Rs.109,874 crore," an official statement said.
This amount
can be considered as a windfall for the government as it has surpassed
the previous high of Rs.106,200 crore that it had received in the 2010
auction, which was spread over 34 days with 183 rounds of bidding.
Officials
said the names of the winners would not be divulged as yet since the
Supreme Court, while allowing the auction to proceed, had directed that
its consent be taken before awarding spectrum, due to litigations filed
by interested parties. The court is to take a call on that Thursday.
The
eight companies that participated in the auction were: Reliance
Communications, Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel, Vodafone India, Tata
Teleservices, Uninor, Idea Cellular and Aircel. The winners will have to
pay around a third of the winning bid price within 10 days and the rest
by 2027.
On offer were blocks for 69 service areas at a total
reserve price of Rs.80,277 crore, and the provisional allocation was
announced for 63 of them at a winning price of Rs.109,874.91 crore. In
50 service areas, the winning bids went at a premium.
A look at
official data further, however, showed that there was short bidding for
every block on offer. The maximum bids of 85 were for the Tamil Nadu
circle, 10 short of the 95 on offer, in the 1,800 MHz band with a
winning amount of Rs.45 crore per block.
The second highest bids
of 75 were received for Punjab circle with a winning amount of Rs.72.15
crore per block in the 900 MHz band. This circle also saw three less
bids.
The central government has budgeted for Rs.43,161.72 crore
from e-auctions of spectrum for the current fiscal. The reserve price
for the entire spectrum in the four bands on offer, across India, was
around Rs.80,000 crore.
The commitment for telecom spectrum comes
over and above the Rs.200,000 crore that India Inc has already bid
under two phases of auctions for award of coal blocks. But the proceeds
from the auction of coal blocks will go to the respective state
governments over 30 years.
"I am glad the presumptions some
people had, that spectrum is worth zero, have been belied," said Finance
Minister Arun Jaitley, referring to the criticism India's official
auditor faced when a notional loss of Rs.176,000 crore was assigned for
handing over the airwaves without auctions.
But his predecessor Kapil Sibal of the Congress said the auctions were flawed.
"The
telecom sector is hugely in debt to the extent of Rs.340,000 crore.
Now, in paying for the high spectrum prices, there'll be no money for
investment in infrastructure," Sibal told IANS just ahead of the
conclusion of the auction.
During the latest auctions, the total
spectrum put up for bidding was 103.75 MHz in 800 MHz band, 177.8 MHz in
900 MHz band and 99.2 MHz in 1,800 MHz band for second generation (2G)
telephony. Another 5 MHz was in the 2,100 MHz band for 3G services.
A
reserve price of Rs.3,423 crore per MHz was fixed for 800 MHz
frequency, Rs.3,399 crore for 900 MHz band and Rs.1,425 crore for the
1,800 MHz band. The government also fixed a reserve price of Rs.3,511
crore per MHz for the frequency for 3G spectrum.
Analysts were worried over the impact of the high bid price on the industry and customers.
"The
whole auction was designed by the government to extract maximum
revenues from the operators. As a result, the industry is going to face
financial needs," Rajan S. Mathews, director general of the
representative body, Cellular Operators' Association of India, told
IANS.
Pointing to a financial indicator for the industry,
analysts quoted GSMA's research body and said while the bidding in India
was at global levels, the average revenue per user was already low for
Indian operators at $2.55, against $17.65 for Germany, $29.30 for the
Netherlands and $28.52 for Britain.
"The spectrum auction outgo
will impact on the rollout and quality of telecom network. In this
competitive environment, operators will find it difficult to raise data
or voice tariffs in the immediate term," said Arpita P. Agarwal, telecom
leader for PriceWaterhouseCoopers.