Supreme Court Gives Telcos 10 Years to Pay AGR Dues to Government

Telcos pay the DoT nearly 3-5 percent of their AGR in usage charges for spectrum or airwaves and 8 percent of AGR as licence fees.

Supreme Court Gives Telcos 10 Years to Pay AGR Dues to Government

Photo Credit: Reuters

The Supreme Court asked telecoms firms to pay 10 percent of the dues owed by March 31, 2021

Highlights
  • The decision would provide some respite to embattled Vodafone Idea
  • Court asked telcos firms pay 10 percent of dues owed by March 31, 2021
  • Vodafone Idea to be vulnerable if court didn't allow staggered payments
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The Supreme Court on Tuesday gave mobile carriers 10 years to pay back dues owed to the government, offering some respite for heavily indebted Vodafone Idea whose business has been hit by cut-throat competition in recent years.

Vodafone Idea and Bharti Airtel, two of India's three major carriers, had previously asked the court for 15 years to settle their fees.

Tuesday's Supreme Court ruling means companies will have until 2031 to clear their dues, after they missed an original January deadline ordering them to pay roughly $13 billion (roughly Rs. 94,878 crores).

The dues refer to the amount that telecom providers have to pay to the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) for using airwaves and in license fees.

The decision will come as a relief to Vodafone Idea, a joint venture between Britain's Vodafone and India's Idea, which reported its eight consecutive quarterly loss in the three months to June and expressed concerns about its ability to stay afloat.

The company's gross debt, excluding its lease liabilities, was Rs. 119,000 crores as of end-June.

The entry in India of Reliance's Jio telecoms venture in late 2016 with free voice services and cut-price data, forced many rivals out of the fiercely competitive market. Others such as Vodafone and Idea were forced to regroup but continue to bleed and lose subscribers.

Vodafone Idea has paid Rs. 7,854 crores, according to regulatory filings, and still owes roughly Rs. 50,000 crores to the government.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court also asked telecoms firms to pay 10 percent of the dues owed by March 31, 2021, pushing Vodafone Idea's stock down 9.8 percent at 08:50 GMT.

"The window for Vodafone to raise funds, have better models and give paybacks commitment is small which is adding pressure on the stock," said Abhimanyu Sofat, Head of Research, at brokerage IIFL Securities.

Vodafone Idea did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bharti Airtel previously said it has paid its complete dues of Rs. 18,000 crores on the basis of self-assessment, but government calculations suggest it still needs to pay another Rs. 25,796 crores. Its shares were up 6.9 percent.

India's newest carrier Jio, controlled by India's richest man Mukesh Ambani, has already cleared its smaller backlog of charges.

India's telecom providers have to pay the DoT nearly three to five percent of their adjusted gross revenue (AGR) in usage charges for airwaves and eight percent of AGR as licence fees. They have long disputed the definition of AGR but last year the Supreme Court upheld the DoT's view the AGR should include all revenue.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


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