By Nivedita Bhattacharjee
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Telecoms operator Reliance Communications
The agreement will see Sistema take a 10 percent stake in billionaire Anil Ambani's RCom, worth about $290 million at current prices, in exchange for its operations.
RCom has also agreed to cover payments for mobile airwaves to be allotted to Russian billionaire Vladimir Yevtushenkov's Sistema, it said.
RCom and Sistema did not provide a value for the deal, but one person with direct knowledge of negotiations put the total at close to 45 billion Indian rupees ($686 million).
Monday's announcement comes at a critical time for a fast-growing but hugely competitive industry: just weeks ahead of the long-awaited launch of telecoms operations by Reliance Industries
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India's mobile phone market is the world's second-biggest after China by number of customers, but its phone carriers operate on wafer-thin margins and cut-throat competition that have dented their balance sheets.
Reliance Industries' deep pockets are expected to pile pressure on smaller players, most of them heavily in debt.
Sistema Shyam Teleservices Ltd, the local unit of Sistema, has less than 1 percent share, with some nine million customers and 15 billion rupees in annual revenue, in a market that has over 10 players.
But it owns precious bandwidth that services the high-speed fourth-generation, or 4G, network, which is expected to see a huge demand as more Indians use their smartphones and tablets to shop, bank or surf the Internet.
"Spectrum is the key asset required for telecom carriers to gain scale," said Neil Shah, research director at Counterpoint Technology Market Research.
"The customer addition is OK, but with this added spectrum, now RCom will be present in circles they weren't."
Last month, RCom said it would partner Reliance Industries' telecoms unit, Jio, to trade and share mobile airwaves and offer 4G services, which, in turn, can use the former's 2G and 3G networks when needed. The partnership was a rare sign of cooperation between the two Ambanis.
Sistema's India unit scaled back its operations in 2013 when it had to buy new telecommunication permits after earlier permits were cancelled following a broader licensing scandal.
On Monday, RCom said it would pay what Sistema owes for its mobile broadband spectrum, which works out to about 3.9 billion rupees per year for the next 10 years.
($1 = 65.5900 rupees)
(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee; Editing by Clara Ferreira Marques and Muralikumar Anantharaman)