Tata Communications Ltd has agreed to sell fixed-line assets of its South Africa-based telecom arm Neotel Pty Ltd to Vodacom SA, a subsidiary of British telecommunication giant Vodafone Plc, under a revised deal, according to a stock market disclosure.
The financial terms of the deal, however, have not been disclosed.
The two companies had entered into exclusive talks for due diligence pertaining to the deal in 2013. The structure of the deal, worth $675 million when originally announced, and its commercial terms were subject to regulatory and competition authority approvals.
At the time of the acquisition announcement in May 2014, Vodacom had clarified that it will not assume Neotelâs debt of about ZAR 4.815 billion as of end-March 2014.
Last month, Tata Communication said the proposed deal to sell South African communication venture Neotel, in which it owns 67.32 per cent, for an enterprise value of ZAR 7 billion (just under $500 million) is being renegotiated.
Now, under the revised deal structure, it has been decided that Neotel's wireless spectrum and licences will be excluded from the deal. Instead, Neotel will offer mobile roaming services to all local mobile network operators, including Vodacom.
Vodacom and Neotel have submitted documents seeking approval for the revised transaction to the Competition Tribunal in South Africa, the stock market disclosure said. âThe Competition Tribunal will consider it at a pre-hearing set down for Thursday 10 December 2015,â it added.
Neotel, which started operations in 2007, is the second-largest provider of fixed telecommunications services for both businesses (commonly referred to as enterprise services) and consumers in South Africa.
It is one of South Africaâs leading converged communications network operators. It provides value-added voice, internet and data services for businesses, wholesale network operators and providers and retail customers using its IP Next Generation Network, powered by Neotelâs fibre optic backbone.
It connects the major centres in South Africa to each other and to the world, directly linking its infrastructure into Tata Communicationsâ global tier I network.