India's top three mobile phone operators spend $13.6 billion in airwaves auction

A man checks his mobile phone as he walks past a shop displaying the Vodafone logo on its shutter in Mumbai January 15, 2014. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/Files

By Aman Shah MUMBAI/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's top three mobile phone network operators have spent a combined $13.6 billion in a government auction of airwaves to secure almost 80 percent of the spectrum on offer, reinforcing their positions in the world's second-biggest mobile market. The heavy bidding reflects their confidence in the potential for data traffic in the world's fastest growing smartphone market, while also stoking concerns about debt levels in an industry which is already among the most leveraged in Asia. "The outcome of this auction ... will eventually lead to a significant outflow of funds and further burden the industry, which already remains under a debt of 2.5 trillion rupees ($39.8 billion)," Cellular Operators Association of India said in a statement. Altogether India raised $17.6 billion in the auction after 19 days of fierce bidding, of which the government expects to receive about 288.72 billion rupees ($4.6 billion) in initial payments, telecoms minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said on Thursday. Idea Cellular, the country's third-biggest mobile operator by market share, spent 303.06 billion rupees in the auction, the single biggest amount spent. Market leader Bharti Airtel paid 293.10 billion rupees, while Vodafone India spent 259.59 billion rupees, according to figures provided by the minister. Auction revenues are much needed by the government to help it meet an ambitious budget target. The winners have until April 4 to make the upfront payment. "I would very earnestly appeal to the companies that national revenue is equally important for growth and India's image," the minister said, appealing to winning bidders to submit initial payments before the current fiscal year ends on March 31. Earlier on Thursday the country's top court allowed the government to announce the auction results, but said frequency allocations could not be made until it rules on complaints over the sale mechanisms. For India's wireless carriers the auction is the only way to renew 20-year network licenses and build the extra capacity needed to cope with the growing data traffic as more Indians use mobile phones to go online. However, the operators also face increased competition from cash-rich conglomerate Reliance Industries Ltd's telecoms unit, which is widely expected to launch 4G mobile broadband services this year. The unit, Reliance Jio, spent 100.77 billion rupees in the auction. The high prices paid by network operators in the auction, more than a third over the government's expectations, is likely to help the larger companies strengthen their positions and could lead to further consolidation in the market, analysts said. (Additional reporting by Tommy Wilkes and Suchitra Mohanty in New Delhi; Editing by Rafael Nam, Susan Thomas and Greg Mahlich)