The move has come a little over a month after the government liberalised the foreign direct investment policy for the telecom sector, permitting up to 100 per cent of foreign investment in services.
Earlier, many international telcos were forced to rope in an Indian partner to rollout services in the country, as foreign direct investment in the sector was capped at 74 per cent.
In the case of Vodafone India, the British parent holds a 64 per cent stake, while Ajay Piramal has 11 per cent.
The remaining 25 per cent stake is owned by independent investors, including Analjit Singh and IDFC.
Vodafone does not disclose the exact holding of Singh, also the chairman of the company.
His stake in the company had risen to 6.2 per cent after he bought former CEO Asim Ghosh’s stake.
Piramal had bought his stake in the company in two tranches after Vodafone, having bought out its former partner Essar group’s stake in the company, was looking for an Indian partner to meet the FDI cap guidelines.
In February last year, Piramal’s purchase of an additional 5.5 per cent stake had cost him $618 million.
Based on these figures, the company’s valuation could be $11.2 billion.
Considering the same valuation for the company’s deal with Singh, the payout could be $696
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