Tag: Foreign Direct Investment

  • DPIIT to issue clarification on capping FDI in digital media

    DPIIT to issue clarification on capping FDI in digital media

    MUMBAI: Amid certain stakeholders raise concern over government’s decision to allow 26 per cent FDI in digital media sector, the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) is likely to issue a clarification soon on the same, Economic Times reported.

    According to some stakeholders, the idea to cap FDI (foreign direct investment) in digital media sector to 26 per cent must be clarified  by government as these stakeholders, who were looking to raise funds through FDI is now put on hold.

    There are two main concerns stakeholders have raised and sought clarification: 1) How the FDI policy of the sector would treat news aggregators, and 2) what would happen to those digital media companies where overseas investment is over 26 per cent

    Taking the views of the Information and Broadcasting Ministry on the issue, the DPIIT is expected to issue clarification shortly, Economic Times said quoting sources.

    In this regard, Deloitte India partner Jehil Thakkar had said that the clarity needed was on how to treat cases of television broadcasters that stream news online, but are allowed 49 per cent FDI.

    He questioned, “What happens to those, whether they qualify fewer than 26 per cent or 49 per cent (FDI)? What happens to news websites which are 100 per cent foreign entity?”

  • FM players seek FDI at par with GECs since only AIR news permitted

    FM players seek FDI at par with GECs since only AIR news permitted

    NEW DELHI: The Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the radio sector should be increased and the government should consider a 15 per cent national ceiling for future auctions and allow news on private FM radio, private FM players have said.

    A Stakeholders’ Consultation on 22 January on the Phase III e-Auction showed that the players wanted a lock-in period of three years on composition of largest Indian shareholder.

    Information & Broadcasting Ministry Secretary Sunil Arora said that the aim of FM Phase III was to enhance radio density in the country and efforts should be made for supporting FM radio to grow into a viable business model. He wanted all stakeholders to give their suggestions and inputs in writing by 30 January if they so desire considering that some stakeholders have already submitted their suggestions in meeting.

    FM operators felt that the reserve prices recommended by TRAI on 24 March 2015 were very high and unviable. However, Ministry officials said the TRAI recommendations were advisory in nature.

    Similarly, it was stated that the rentals by Prasar Bharati were very high.

    It was also argued that the FDI limit could be increased to 100 per cent to bring it at par with the general entertainment channels as no news other than that from All India Radio was permitted.

    This suggestion from Reliance Broadcasting found favour with many of the participants but some companies like ENIL and DB Corp wanted permission to make news bulletins on their own. The Association of Radio Operators in India (AROI) said news from PTI and ANI could be permitted.

    AROI said if subsequent auction takes place in batches without relaxing the 15 per cent national cap, then this cap should be applied on overall number of channels being put to auction in phase III and not batch wise. 

    ENIL found it unreasonable that Phase II migrant licenses were made to undergo three years’ lock-in restriction under Phase III regime as well when they had already served five years’ lock-in under Phase II. But HT Media said the lock-in requirement was fundamental to FM Phase III policy.

    Representative of Digital Radio Broadcasting also suggested that connected companies of a Group be treated as a single entity for participation in online bidding / auction process.

    Suggestions for future rounds included more clock rounds per day; increase of Auction Activity Requirement (AAR); apart from auction report at the end of the day, and report of each round.

    ENIL referred to delay of security clearance of its directors and key operatives from Home Ministry.

  • FM players seek FDI at par with GECs since only AIR news permitted

    FM players seek FDI at par with GECs since only AIR news permitted

    NEW DELHI: The Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the radio sector should be increased and the government should consider a 15 per cent national ceiling for future auctions and allow news on private FM radio, private FM players have said.

    A Stakeholders’ Consultation on 22 January on the Phase III e-Auction showed that the players wanted a lock-in period of three years on composition of largest Indian shareholder.

    Information & Broadcasting Ministry Secretary Sunil Arora said that the aim of FM Phase III was to enhance radio density in the country and efforts should be made for supporting FM radio to grow into a viable business model. He wanted all stakeholders to give their suggestions and inputs in writing by 30 January if they so desire considering that some stakeholders have already submitted their suggestions in meeting.

    FM operators felt that the reserve prices recommended by TRAI on 24 March 2015 were very high and unviable. However, Ministry officials said the TRAI recommendations were advisory in nature.

    Similarly, it was stated that the rentals by Prasar Bharati were very high.

    It was also argued that the FDI limit could be increased to 100 per cent to bring it at par with the general entertainment channels as no news other than that from All India Radio was permitted.

    This suggestion from Reliance Broadcasting found favour with many of the participants but some companies like ENIL and DB Corp wanted permission to make news bulletins on their own. The Association of Radio Operators in India (AROI) said news from PTI and ANI could be permitted.

    AROI said if subsequent auction takes place in batches without relaxing the 15 per cent national cap, then this cap should be applied on overall number of channels being put to auction in phase III and not batch wise. 

    ENIL found it unreasonable that Phase II migrant licenses were made to undergo three years’ lock-in restriction under Phase III regime as well when they had already served five years’ lock-in under Phase II. But HT Media said the lock-in requirement was fundamental to FM Phase III policy.

    Representative of Digital Radio Broadcasting also suggested that connected companies of a Group be treated as a single entity for participation in online bidding / auction process.

    Suggestions for future rounds included more clock rounds per day; increase of Auction Activity Requirement (AAR); apart from auction report at the end of the day, and report of each round.

    ENIL referred to delay of security clearance of its directors and key operatives from Home Ministry.

  • Will foreigners buy into easing of FDI in cable TV, DTH?

    Will foreigners buy into easing of FDI in cable TV, DTH?

    MUMBAI: The government has earlier this week announced the lifting of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) barriers for 15 sectors as a Diwali bonus to industry.

     

    Hereon, the limit for uplinking of news and current affairs for television channels has been increased from 26 per cent to 49 per cent. Foreign majors wanting to look at a long term play in the broadcast distribution space can now pump in 100 per cent in cable TV networks (multi-system operators and local cable operators), DTH, teleport, headend-in-the-sky (HITS) and mobile TV ventures as against the 74 per cent earlier Distribution platforms can raise as much as 49 per cent FDI through the automatic route. If companies want to go beyond that, they will need government approval. The radio sector has got some welcome breathing space in that investment limits have been hoicked to 49 per cent from 26 per cent earlier.

     

    What does this all mean for the television ecosystem? Will there be a flood of money flowing into cable TV, DTH, teleport, HITS and mobile TV ventures from overseas? Will news channels attract foreign investment by the sackful?

     

    We, at indiantelevision.com, believe that none of this likely to happen in a hurry in all the segments that have been prised open.

     

    Distribution is a tough play in India as history has shown. It is relatively unorganized, with low ARPUs, it lacks transparency, is small in scale, and is short on capital, which makes it an unappealing asset to invest in. Digitisation of cable TV has led to some improvement, but it is still a halfway house. The lack of last mile customer ownership, paucity of subscriber information, lack of two way addressability, and business norms and ethics make it a relatively high risk investment.

     

    Things may change if Reliance Jio makes inroads into cable TV and brings some order into it. However, its management may well discover that distribution is like a slippery soap in a shower, that  it is more complicated than distributing electricity or exploring and drilling for oil.
     

     

    It is the MSOs’ broadband businesses that are a lot more transparent,  that have in any case been spun off into separate companies keeping in mind government regulations and restrictions.  And this is what may catch the interest of investors.

     
    In the nineties, Rupert Murdoch partnered with Subhash Chandra in Siticable – only to exit a little later with his knuckles bruised. A few years later he once again took a shot at it when Star India invested in the Rajan Raheja promoted Hathway Cable & Datacom. Once again, he had to exit yelping in pain. Since then, Star has been extremely averse to investing in cable TV.

     Most of the major distribution ventures are listed: Siticable, Hathway Cable & Datacom, Ortel, Hinduja, Den Cable, SunTV, DishTV, Airtel, Reliance Big (the management is currently getting it delisted),  and some even have attracted private equity investments. But the stock market has not really bought into pure play distribution initiatives and the shares have been depressed as compared to the prices they could command. The PEs which have parked funds in them are still waiting for a nice fat return on their investments.

     Where FDI has worked is in the DTH space and the sole exception is DTH operator Tata Sky in which Twenty First Century Corp holds a 30 per cent stake.  Then there is Videocon d2h, which is listed on Nasdaq, following to the support of its lead investment partner Harry Sloan of Silver Eagle. The Essel group owned Dish TV has got the thumbs up from the market and has got a buy recommendation from many research firms.

     
     
    DTH operators, unlike their cousins on the ground, are more organized, professional, have transparency of operations and have recently started getting some payback from their upfront and cumulative investments over the past decade or so building scale in their customer base.

     
    Hence, it is quite possible that Dish TV, Airtel, Videocon, and Tata Sky might see some activity following the loosening of FDI.  But even prior to the announcement, not many investor suitors had lined up looking to partner with them.

    At the time of writing this report, the stock markets had reacted positively to the news about the easing of FDI in media, and had pushed up the share prices of Dish, Siticable, DEN Networks by 10 per cent plus before Diwali.

     Sun TV, has so far been happy being a lone player with a stranglehold on its markets, and has desisted from partnerships with local players. One does not know if promoters Kalanithi and Kaveri Maran will change their thinking now.

     As far as news is concerned, major news organisations worldwide have enough on their hands. They are grappling with the changing paradigm of news gathering and dissemination, courtesy the explosion in social media and their live streaming apps which threaten to make individuals  – whether journalists or online stars – with huge followings, a rival to large news networks. For the new millennials, online is the preferred source of news, which they consume on their twitter or facebook timelines.

     India has a surfeit of news channels or ‘views channels’; many of them are run for purposes of influence, and not as commercial initiatives. For the relatively more professional ones, the key question is whether foreign investors – especially those in the news business would be happy with a less- than majority equity position in a news television channel. For that to appear attractive they will look for dividends or a northward movement in the stock price.
     

     
    News organizations normally are obsessive about keeping control over the content on a news channel. But you there have had been licensing deals – like in the case of CNN-IBN.  Others have come in on their own, after getting downlinking and uplinking clearances.

     

    It’s not as if news television in India is a very scalable business opportunity.  At least, so far. The largest news network does revenues of around Rs 500 crore.  This could go up to Rs 1000 crore with the expansion in regional news and distribution internationally. The limited scalability despite, amongst the news players some of whom look alluring figure: NDTV, Times Now, Zee Media, TV9, TV Today, ITV group, and  India TV. Of course some smaller players like BAG Films E24 group might attract FDI.

     

     What should come as a relief is the allowing of 100 per cent FDI through the automatic route in non-news and current affairs channels. Many new channels and broadcast networks which are looking  to expand their global footprint to include the Indian audience may now do so, either through mass and/or niche channels. Full ownership means they can control their destinies in India.
     
    Now that the government has opened its house on FDI in media, it would do well by making the procedures simpler and faster. TV broadcast players managements have to perforce get ministry of home affairs, ministry of information and broadcasting’s  and RBI’s clearances. The  bureaucrats,  directors and officers in these bodies need to be trained to reflect the Modi government’s approach in being industry enabling, rather than being obstructionist. Maybe a single window clearance approach could help. Otherwise, even this FDI liberalization may end up being another well-intended-but-misplaced initiative.

     

  • Govt earned Rs 48 crore from foreign TV channels as fees

    Govt earned Rs 48 crore from foreign TV channels as fees

    NEW DELHI: The Information and Broadcasting (I&B) Ministry earned a sum of Rs 48.05 crore during the current year and the last three years from foreign television channels towards registration and annual renewal fees.

     

    Three broadcasting companies, which have permission of 17 foreign TV channels, obtained permission for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) during the last three years as well as the current year.

     

    Speaking in the Lok Sabha, I&B minister Arun Jaitley said that the Ministry has permitted 822 TV channels as on 5 August, 2015 under Uplinking/Downlinking Guidelines. The details are available on the Ministry’s website www.mib.nic.in.

     

    Under the Downlinking Guidelines, the companies are not required to report changes in shareholding pattern to the Ministry for channels uplinked from abroad.

     

    Content telecast on private satellite TV channels is regulated in accordance with the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act 1995 and the Rules framed thereunder.

  • FinMin defers decision on Hathway & Den’s proposals for increasing FDI

    FinMin defers decision on Hathway & Den’s proposals for increasing FDI

    NEW DELHI: The Finance Ministry has deferred any decision on proposals by two multi-system operators (MSOs), Hathway Cable and Datacom Limited and Den Networks, for increasing the foreign direct investment to 74 per cent.

     

    The action was taken on the advice of the Foreign Investments Promotion Board (FIPB).

     

    Hathway Cable and Datacom Limited had sought approval for increasing foreign investment limit for FIIs, FPIs, etc. under the Portfolio Investment Scheme from 49 per cent of its issued and fully paid up share capital to 74 per cent.

     

    The government had in 2012 relaxed foreign direct investment (FDI) limit in direct to home (DTH), cable TV industry and teleports from 49 per cent to 74 per cent.

     

    In January, Hathway Cable & Datacom, which became the first MSO to have crossed the $1 billion mark in terms of enterprise valuation, announced that its Board of Directors had approved and passed the resolution to increase the foreign investment limit from the current 49 per cent to 74 per cent, subject to approval from the FIPB of India, Ministry of Finance and/or the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

     

    “Subject to receipt of approval of the Foreign Investment Promotion Board of India, Ministry of Finance and / or the Reserve Bank of India and all other applicable authorities, increasing the foreign investment limit only by Foreign Institutional Investors, Foreign Portfolio Investors, etc. under the Portfolio Investment Scheme in accordance with Schedules 2 and 2A of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (Transfer or Issue of Security by a Person Resident Outside India) Regulations, 2000 in the Company from 49 per cent to 74 per cent of the issued arid fully paid-up share capital of the Company,” read the announcement.

     

    Meanwhile, Den had sought for increase in foreign investment limit beyond 49 per cent and up to 74 per cent by FIIs, NRIs, FPIs, and other eligible foreign investors through route of secondary market and / or open market purchase.

     

    A spokesperson for Den said that it would wait to hear from FIPB about the reasons for deferring the decision, before reacting.

     

    Earlier in March this year, the Board of Directors of Den Networks approved this proposal to increase foreign investment limit from the existing 49 per cent to 74 per cent of the issued and fully paid-up share capital of the company.

     

    The decision was subject to shareholder approval (through postal ballot), Foreign Investment Promotion Board nod and adherence to all other statutory requirements. Currently, FIIs hold 20.27 per cent stake in Den Networks. 

  • Decision on Nick proposal for buying entire holding in Prism TV deferred

    Decision on Nick proposal for buying entire holding in Prism TV deferred

    NEW DELHI: The Government today deferred approval to a proposal by Nickelodeon Asia Holdings Pte. Ltd., Singapore for purchasing the entire holdings of Shinano Retail Private Limited, India.

     

    Nickelodeon Asia Holdings plans to purchase the holdings of Shinano in Prism TV Private Limited.

     

    The Finance Ministry on the recommendation of the Foreign Investments Promotion Board (FIBP) approved a proposal of Viacom 18 Media Pvt. Ltd. for the deletion of one condition in the amendment.

     

    However, this does not involve any foreign direct investment (FDI).

  • Sony gets permission to downlink more channels into India

    Sony gets permission to downlink more channels into India

    NEW DELHI: The government has approved a proposal by Multi Screen Media for increasing the foreign equity participation for production of television programmes in India.

     

    The approval has also been given to the company for downlinking certain TV channels, following a recommendation by the Foreign Investments Promotion Board.

     

    However, the Finance Ministry said this will not require any fresh inflow of foreign direct investment.