MTNL keen on acquisitions in Africa

January 19, 2010 06:20 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 06:49 am IST - New Delhi

Keen to expand its operations abroad, State-owned telecom operator MTNL on Tuesday said it is keen on entering Africa either by getting a new licence or buying out an existing operator.

“We have already earmarked Rs. 500 crore last year for the purpose... But funds are not an issue... We had bid for a company in Saudi Arabia at over USD 3.5 billion,” Kuldip Singh, Chairman and Managing Director, MTNL, said.

“We are looking for a right opportunity at a right price,” he said, adding that whenever any opportunity arises the company would explore it.

Singh, who was hitherto Director (Technical), assumed additional charge as CMD late last week after his predecessor R.S.P. Sinha failed to get an extension.

MTNL offers an entire gamut of telecom services in the two metros of Delhi and Mumbai and has presence in Mauritius and Nepal and has been exploring options to expand operations.

“Africa is a good opportunity. Most of the private players are also expanding their footprint there,” he said, adding that getting a licence is a big challenge there and in private deals, the bidding can sometimes be very irrational.

Asked whether the company has a specified corpus for global acquisitions, Singh said: “MTNL is a zero debt company and as far as funds are concerned, we have very comfortable cash reserves.”

MTNL is operating in Nepal through a Joint Venture called UTL (United Telecom Limited) and in Mauritius through a 100 per cent subsidiary called MTML (Mahanagar Telephone Mauritius Ltd).

The company, through its subsidiary Millennium Telecom Ltd (MTL) is also laying Submarine Optical Fibre Cable from India to South-East Asia and to Middle East with an aim to onward connectivity to Europe and the USA.

Asked about his top priority, Singh said improving the top line (total income from operations) is required. Last year, MTNL’s revenue stood at over Rs. 4,460 crore and like other telecom firms, MTNL too is under pressure amid fierce competition on the tariff front.

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