Reliance Industries, one of India’s largest private sector companies, led by Mukesh Ambani, may enter into a joint venture with Anil Ambani’s Reliance Communication in an attempt to launch cheaper tablet devices for as less as $120.  As per reports, Reliance may make use of RCom’s towers and fiber optic cables to offer high-speed data services to users. The two companies will be coming together for the first time after their split in 2005. However, sources claim that RCom will not be involved in any equity investment in this deal.

Further, sources claim that apart from the towers, Reliance may also use RCom’s transmission facilities like domestic and international long distance networks to carry its data traffic. Consequently, Reliance will reportedly have access to as many as 50,000 towers of RCom across 1,500 cities in India. According to reports, in May 2010, both the Ambani brothers terminated an incomplete agreement which was in place for five years, thereby allowing Reliance Industries to re-enter telecom, following which it became the only company to acquire licenses for wireless broadband services across the nation for US $2.6 billion.

 

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India’s second largest Mobile Operator, Reliance Communication plans to seek regulatory approval for selling 10% of Reliance Infratel (its infrastructure arm) for close to $1Bn.

Reliance Infratel sold a 5 percent stake to  global investors for about $290 million in 2007. It  had revenue of more than $1 Bn and a profit of $300 Mn in the year ended March 31, according to  Billionaire Chairman Anil Ambani.

The share sale will  help fund an expansion of the nationwide network of 48,000 towers at Reliance Infratel as demand for leasing networks is likely to double in the next couple of years according to Ambani.

The Reliance-Dhirubhai Anil Ambani Group, has plans to bid for mobile licences abroad for providing high-end business process outsourcing services, reports Business Standard.

It has lined up a raft of initiatives to give its telecommunications business a global footprint.

Moreover, the company also plans to take Internet protocol television (IPTV) and other media services to consumers in foreign markets after it launches them in

India

.

In order to carry these services, the group will set up three broadband cable networks- one from India to China through Nepal, two, an undersea cable between Asia and the US, and three, an extension of its Falcon cable from the Maldives to East Africa. Industry analysts put a USD 1 billion price tag to these three cable systems.

The group is also eyeing mobile licences in

Kenya

,

Bhutan

and

Morocco

.

Source- http://www.myiris.com

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