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Tata, Docomo Settle $1.2 Billion Wireless Dispute in India

Tata Sons plans to withdraw all its objections to paying a $1.17 billion to NTT Docomo.

Tata, Docomo Settle $1.2 Billion Wireless Dispute in India
A pedestrian walks past a store of Tata DoCoMo, a joint venture between NTT DoCoMo Inc. and Tata Teleservices Ltd., in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Tata Sons Ltd. and NTT Docomo Inc. agreed to settle a dispute over a $1.2 billion arbitration award in favor of the Japanese company after their Indian mobile-phone partnership soured. Shares of a unit of the joint venture jumped as much as 20 percent in Mumbai.

In separate statements, Mumbai-based Tata Sons and Tokyo-based Docomo said they jointly applied to the Delhi High Court to enforce the compensation ordered by a London arbitration court in June 2016. The companies also agreed to suspend proceedings in the U.S. and the U.K. The Indian court will decide on whether to accept the accord March 8.

Docomo has been fighting India’s largest conglomerate over the right to sell its stake in closely held Tata Teleservices Ltd. for at least 50 percent of the original $2.6 billion investment made in 2009. India’s central bank weighed in on the dispute, citing a new rule that foreign investors could exit an investment only at prevailing “fair value,’’ effectively barring Docomo from receiving the money already deposited by the Indian partner.

At a hearing at the Delhi High Court Tuesday, a lawyer representing the Reserve Bank of India said he would have to seek instructions from the central bank to clarify its stand on the settlement application. The court said it will hear all concerned parties at the March 8 hearing.

A resolution of the dispute would allow Tata Sons to move on after a boardroom coup that saw the ouster of Chairman Cyrus Mistry last October. Ratan Tata, who briefly returned to Tata’s helm, sought to honor the agreement with Docomo. The handling of the dispute by Mistry was one of the reasons for his replacement by Ratan Tata, people with knowledge of the matter said earlier. Mistry’s stalling was seen as an erosion of the Tata ethic of honoring commitments, according to the people.
Read how India is making life rougher for global deals here.

Shares of Tata Teleservices Maharashtra Ltd., a listed unit of the venture, soared 20 percent, the biggest jump in four months, as of 2:21 p.m. in Mumbai. Docomo shares fell 0.8 percent in the final minutes of trading in Tokyo as it remains uncertain whether the Indian court will ratify the settlement.

To contact the reporters on this story: Siddharth Philip in Mumbai at sphilip3@bloomberg.net, Upmanyu Trivedi in New Delhi at utrivedi2@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dave McCombs at dmccombs@bloomberg.net, Subramaniam Sharma