With Amazon Deal, Airtel Poses Rising Challenge To Ambani's Jio

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Months after billionaire Mukesh Ambani's upstart wireless carrier swept into the No. 1 spot, a trounced rival is mounting a comeback, and investors are loving it. 

Bharti Airtel Ltd. is the best performer on India's stocks benchmark this year, jumping 26 per cent and reaching a record on May 19, amid optimism the carrier will continue to attract bigger-spending users. The stock surged Thursday in Mumbai after Reuters reported Amazon.com Inc. was in early talks to buy a stake of at least $2 billion.

The comeback is a sharp turnaround for billionaire Sunil Mittal after grueling competition with Ambani's Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd. knocked Airtel off its perch in the world's second-biggest wireless market by users. Mittal's company reported a record loss last fiscal year, while a shock court order to pay $3 billion in back fees forced the operator to raise capital. Another rival -- Vodafone Idea Ltd. -- is struggling to survive under a pile of debt.

"The market assumed Bharti Airtel would take months to recover from the onslaught of Reliance Jio," said Arun Kejriwal, director at KRIS, an investment advisory firm in Mumbai. "But they raised funds from the market and have moved quickly to take advantage of the duopolistic nature of Indian telecom landscape."

Jio and former No. 1 Airtel have battled over India's telecom market since 2016, when Ambani pushed his way in with a 4G service that offered free calls and cheap data packages. That war of attrition prompted money-losing carriers to exit or merge with others, leaving only three non-state carriers, from about a dozen a few years ago.

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Facing a demand from the government for $4 billion in back fees, one of the survivors, Vodafone Idea, is cutting back coverage to save money and has said it will probably need government help to stay in operation.

Jio, Airtel and Vodafone Idea didn't respond to emailed requests for comment.

With an emerging duopoly, there is more at stake than just gathering hundreds of millions of subscribers and collecting monthly tariffs. Mr Ambani has placed Jio at the center of a digital platform he expects to drive his group's growth into e-commerce, payments and online entertainment.

Airtel has shown it intends to compete for the same turf through its payments, video-on-demand and e-commerce divisions. The talks with U.S. online retail giant Amazon are over a possible 5 per cent stake in Airtel, Reuters said Thursday, citing anonymous sources. A deal will help Amazon access the Indian wireless carrier's 300 million subscribers.

By adding high-value users, Airtel poses a rising challenge to Mr Ambani, who's just off raising more than $10 billion in weeks from Facebook Inc., General Atlantic, KKR & Co., Silver Lake Partners and Vista Equity Partners. The deals give Jio a formidable profile, valuing its Jio Platforms Ltd. at more than $65 billion, compared with Airtel's $40 billion market value.

On Friday, Reliance said Abu Dhabi's Mubadala Investment Co. will invest about $1.2 billion in Jio Platforms, extending Ambani's fund-raising streak.

Airtel is also raising cash to pay down fees related to the court ruling and as it expands 4G coverage across India. Airtel's parent Bharti Telecom Ltd. last month said it is seeking about $1 billion by selling a stake in the Indian mobile carrier after its share price hit a record in May. In January, Airtel raised $3 billion in a sale of shares and bonds to help pay fees.

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