Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Thursday, Mar 27, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Telecommunications
Info-Tech - Foreign Direct Investment
Get Latest BSE Quote
SingTel Australia’s proposal deferred

FIPB asks the co to get NoC from Bharti

Moumita Bakshi Chatterjee
Thomas K Thomas

New Delhi, March 26 SingTel Australia Holding’s long distance telephony plan seems to have run into a bit of rough weather with the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) asking the company to obtain a no-objection certificate from its current Indian partner – Bharti.

SingTel Australia Holding, Singapore, had approached the FIPB, in October last year, for setting-up a subsidiary or joint venture in India entailing FDI up to 74 per cent for offering long distance telephony services, primarily targeting enterprises.

Security concerns

Adding to Singtel’s woes, Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is believed to have disfavoured granting security clearance to the proposal on the ground that Indonesia’s business watchdog had found Temasek Holding (promoter of SingTel) guilty of breaching competition rules.

Recommending the proposal be deferred, the board noted that while the issue of competition could be addressed later, a No-objection certificate from Bharti, the joint venture partner, must be obtained as the proposal attracts Press Note 1 (2005 series).

SingTel has identified Leela Lace Software Solutions and Bharti Enterprises Ltd as its Indian partners who would hold collectively 26 per cent of the share capital of the joint venture company to be set up in India. Sources said that the company has clarified that the joint venture would apply for a full-fledged national long distance, international long distance and Internet service provider licences. Sources, however, pointed out that the nuances of the particular services to be delivered through the joint venture would be based on commercial understanding between Bharti Group and SingTel.

DoT stand

During the deliberation at a meeting held in March 2008, the Department of Telecom said it had no objection to the proposal entailing 74 per cent FDI on the condition that the new venture would provide services covered under NLD, ILD and ISP and would not provide any service covered under Unified Access Licence; and that the investor would adhere to Press Note 3 of 2007 and also the licence conditions as well as licence conditions.

More Stories on : Telecommunications | Foreign Direct Investment | Regulatory Bodies & Rulings | Bharti Tele-Ventures Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Clasic Hiring

Stories in this Section
Religare all set to buy UK brokerage Hichens


SingTel Australia’s proposal deferred
‘Textile exporters opted for derivatives to beat interest cost’
Chidambaram favours reasonable oil price band
Concern over Reliance move on petrol pumps
Central Bank of India (Rs 90.60): Buy
Deal to provide access to Western markets
Polaris retail software launch positive for margins
Day Trading Guide
‘FM radio biz can beat projections’
Tatas bag Ford marques
Jaguar, Land Rover: From utilitarian to premium
The brands should remain British: Tata
‘Reviving sales of the 2 brands will be a challenge’
Maruti not to raise prices for now; launches Swift DZire
Net interest margins of banks set to decline
KS Oils buys palm plantation in Indonesia
Global palm oil gains 9% on Customs duty cut
Pure term insurance products may cost less
Short-selling does have a rationale


BusinessLine E-paper


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line