Sunday, May 13, 2012

Norway warns India over telecom licence row



A Norwegian minister warned on Saturday that India will lose vital foreign investment if state-run Norwegian telecom giant Telenor has to exit the country nursing multi-billion-dollar losses.
Trade Minister Trond Giske told reporters in New Delhi  that Telenor, which has a strong balance sheet, can absorb the $3 billion investment write-off it would face if it quits India due to telecom licensing problems.
 “If a company like Telenor can lose $3 billion in India, it has an effect on other foreign investors. They ask if your (state-controlled) company can lose that money, how will private companies be treated?” Giske said.
Policy uncertainty has been one of the main criticisms of foreign investors.
In January, Telenor was among eight mobile operators whose licences granted in 2008 were cancelled by the Supreme Court, on grounds the sale was under-priced and corrupt in what has become one of the biggest scandals in India’s history.
The court ordered an auction for new licences.
But the telecom regulator has proposed a 10-fold hike in the spectrum auction base price from the 2008 sale and a big reduction in bandwidth up for grabs.
“If these recommendations become policy, Telenor will likely be forced to exit India” because the cost would be too high, Giske said.
Addding that “Telenor is not just any company.”, the company’s departure could also have “political implications,” he said.
Telenor earlier in the week said net quarterly profit plunged to 583 million kroner (77.1 million euros, $100.5 million) from nearly 2.8 billion kroner a year earlier due to a writedown on its Indian operations, and Giske's comments came just after of it.
Other Indian mobile operators also oppose the regulator’s proposals.

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