Qatar Foundation Sells 5% Airtel Stake For Rs. 9,500 Crore

Qatar Foundation Sells 5% Airtel Stake For Rs. 9,500 Crore
x
Highlights

Qatar Foundation, a non-profit run by the gas-rich country\'s royal family, today sold its 5 per cent stake in India\'s largest telecom services company Bharti Airtel for over Rs. 9,500 crore.

Qatar Foundation, a non-profit run by the gas-rich country's royal family, today sold its 5 per cent stake in India's largest telecom services company Bharti Airtel for over Rs. 9,500 crore. Three Pillars, an affiliate of Qatar Foundation Endowment, initially offered 19.98 crore shares in Bharti Airtel at a price band of Rs. 473 to Rs. 490 apiece on the stock market but later lowered the top end of the band to Rs. 480, sources privy to the development said.

The offer price was at a discount to Tuesday's closing price of Rs. 514.35 on the BSE but higher than the Rs. 340 it had paid for the shares in 2013.

Airtel closed 3.73 per cent lower at Rs. 495.15 on the BSE on Wednesday.

In a regulatory filing, Three Pillars Pte Ltd confirmed the sale, saying 19.98 crore sales were sold through the open market.

The buyers included a mix of foreign and domestic institutional investors, said another source who did not wish to be named.

The company now holds nil shares in Bharti Airtel. It did not immediately give the price at which the sale was made.

A Bharti Airtel spokesperson declined to comment on the stake sale by the Qatari investor.


Qatar is redeploying resources to bolster the economy and banking system after Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain cut diplomatic ties over charges of funding terrorism. Qatar has repeatedly denied the allegations.

Qatar Foundation Endowment had acquired the 5 per cent equity stake in Bharti Airtel for Rs. 6,796 crore way back in 2013.

The stake sale coincides with similar moves by other Qatar-based investors who are paring their holdings in various foreign companies in the backdrop of sanctions imposed by Arab countries.

The stake sale also comes at a time when the Indian telecom market has seen an intense tariff war triggered by the entry of aggressive newcomer Reliance Jio, backed by billionaire Mukesh Ambani, in 2016.

The competition in the market has hit earnings and financial metrics of large established telecom players and led to a massive consolidation in the industry, with smaller players exiting the market, and others either joining hands or acquiring smaller players to protect their turf.

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS