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BPL family row reaches an end

July 16, 2005 10:34 IST

TPG Nambiar, the BPL group patriarch, and his son-in-law, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, have reached an out-of-court financial settlement over BPL Communications.

According to sources close to the development, Nambiar was looking for Rs 125-150 crore (Rs 1.25-1.5 billion) by exiting BPL Communications to fund his share of investment in the proposed 50:50 joint venture with Sanyo of Japan for colour televisions.

The family feud came to an end today when Nambiar sought to withdraw his petition against Chandrasekhar at the Company Law Board, Chennai. CLB Additional Principal Bench Vice-chairman KK Balu then "dismissed" the petition.

This has cleared the way for Chandrasekhar to offload 49 per cent stake in the company to a strategic investor. BPL Communications is the holding company for BPL Mobile Communications and BPL Cellular.

BPL Mobile Communications operates cellular services in Mumbai, while BPL Cellular runs services in Tamil Nadu (excluding Chennai), Kerala and Maharashtra (excluding Mumbai).

Chandrashekhar has been in talks with several telecom operators including China Mobile, Egypt-based Orascom Telecom and Russia-based Alpha Telecom for selling a stake in BPL Communications. With the spat with his father-in-law over, sources close to Chandrashekhar said that he could clinch a deal fast.

Besides these, Essar is the other Indian company, which is also said to be in the reckoning. Another buzz doing the rounds is the merger of BPL Communication with IDEA and Spice Telecom to create a pan-India entity taking on Airtel and Hutchison.

The fight between the two came out in the open in September last year when Nambiar petitioned the CLB to restrain Chandrashekhar from selling BPL Communications shares alleging that he had surreptitiously upped his stake in the company. In his defence, Chandrashekhar had said all the transactions had been above board.

BPL Communications during its past ten year of operations has invested around Rs 4,500 crore (Rs 45 billion) and it reported an operating profit of Rs 406 crore (Rs 4.06 billion) for 2004-05, up 42 per cent over 2003-04. Revenues were up 39 per cent to Rs 1,012 crore (Rs 10.12 billion) for 2004-05 as against Rs 728 crore (Rs 7.28 billion) for 2003-04.

The spat

BS Bureau in Bangalore
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