Indonesia’s largest telecommunication provider, PT Telekomunikasi
Indonesia (Telkom), says due diligence for its plan to buy a
controlling stake in Hong Kong and Singapore-based undersea cable
operator Pacnet Ltd. will be completed next month.
Newly
appointed president director Arief Yahya said the company planned to
use both internal and external cash to finance the acquisition, whose
value has yet to be determined, pending due diligence.
“We have
time for ‘go or no go’ until this June [...] Once we submit [the bid],
we have to keep silent about it,” Arief told reporters on Monday. Arief
confirmed that Telkom submitted its bid earlier this month, when the
company was under previous management.
Pacnet reportedly has a
value of US$1 billion. According to a report by rating agency Moody’s
Investor Service, Pacnet reaped $528.6 million in revenue in 2011, up
4.4 percent from a year earlier. The company’s earnings before
interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) stood at $82
million last year, up 2.2 percent from 2010.
According to
Moody’s, Pacnet was incorporated in Bermuda in 2006. The company wholly
owns and operates the EAC-2C2 network, Asia’s largest privately owned
submarine cable infrastructure of 36,800 kilometers.
The
company also owns the EAC Pacific network spanning 9,620 kilometers
from Japan to the US. Pacnet provides data connectivity solutions to
major telecommunications carriers, large multinational enterprises and
small and medium enterprises in the Asia-Pacific region.
Telecommunication
expert Danrivanto Budhijanto said that the Pacnet acquisition would
help Telkom develop its undersea cable network, which was important in
an archipelagic country such as Indonesia.
“Telkom is trying to
develop a fiber-optic network on land, operate a satellite network in
space and build an undersea cable network so that the company can play
on the global stage, through Pacnet, which already has a global
network. This is as rare an opportunity that a telecommunication
company can get,” he said.
Danrivanto said that Telkom needed to be a player on both the regional and global stages.
“Telkom
is already too big to play only in Indonesia. Not all development must
be performed by Telkom. It’s time for other operators to build their
networks in Indonesia,” Danrivanto, a former member of the Indonesian
Telecommunication Regulatory Authority (BRTI), said.
Telkom,
which is 51.19 percent owned by the government, is strengthening its
position atop Indonesia’s telecommunication service sector with massive
development and investment to boost income from its internet data
business.
The company has set aside Rp 21.19 trillion until 2012
to build a national broadband network that will connect customers to
content providers for data connection of 20 to 100 megabits per second
(Mbps).
The network is designed to cover 497 cities and 13 million homes by the end of 2015.
Telkom
is also replacing its copper cable fixed wireline network into fiber
optic network to deliver faster internet connections.
The
transformation from copper cable to fiber-optic was officially launched
at the end of April. The company aims to install fiber-optic cable for
one million users by the year’s end.
Telkom is expecting 8
percent growth in the competitive telecommunications market, which has
reached a saturated point, particularly as the number of SIM card
holders in Indonesia has exceed the nation’s population of about 240
million.
Shares in Telkom (TLKM) were unchanged at Rp 7,850 a
piece on Tuesday, while the company’s market capitalization was
previously reported at Rp 158.3 trillion.
Source : thejakartapost.com
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