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Carlyle Group To Buy 25% Stake In Bharti Airtel’s Data Centre Business

After the transaction, Bharti Airtel will hold 75% stake in Nxtra.

People are seen silhouetted shaking hands at an event in Houston, Texas, U.S. (Photographer: Aaron M. Sprecher/Bloomberg)
People are seen silhouetted shaking hands at an event in Houston, Texas, U.S. (Photographer: Aaron M. Sprecher/Bloomberg)

Carlyle Group will pick up a 25% stake in Bharti Airtel Ltd.’s data centre business, its third investment in the country in two months.

The private equity firm will pay about $235 million for the holding in Nxtra Data Ltd., pegging the enterprise valuation of Sunil Mittal-controlled carrier’s subsidiary at $1.2 billion, according to an exchange filing. The deal is subject to regulatory approvals, including from the Competition Commission of India.

After the transaction, Bharti Airtel will hold 75% stake in Nxtra, which offers data centre services to startups and small and medium enterprises and governments. Nxtra will use the proceeds to scale up its infrastructure and offerings across the country, the filing said.

This is Carlyle Group’s third investment in two months. In May, it had agreed to buy a stake in SeQuent Scientific Ltd., followed by a 20% holding in Ajay Piramal’s pharmaceutical business, Piramal Pharma Ltd. in June.

“Rapid digitisation has opened up a massive growth opportunity for data centres in India and we plan to accelerate our investments to become a major player in this segment,” Gopal Vittal, managing director and chief executive officer (India and South Asia) at Bharti Airtel, said in the filing.

According to Neeraj Bharadwaj, managing director of the Carlyle Asia Partners advisory team, India is set to become one of the largest markets in the world for digital services. And Bharti Airtel is well positioned to leverage the potential growth of data centres in India.

The deal comes after Bharti Airtel’s peer Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd.’s parent raised more than $15.2 billion through multiple stake sales in its digital asset Jio Platforms Ltd., which turned Reliance Industries Ltd. into a net debt-free company much before the targeted timeline.

As on March 31, Bharti Airtel had a consolidated net debt of Rs 148,228 crore.