As an alternative, Malhotra suggested Indus Towers, on which the firm has an ‘add’ rating. He described it as a “lower beta play on what happens with Vodafone.” The rationale is twofold: the valuation is supportive and already reflects the uncertainties surrounding Vodafone Idea, and the stock is attractive from a free cash flow (FCF) yield perspective. This makes it a potentially safer investment for those wanting to bet on the sector’s stability.
Regarding Bharti Airtel, Malhotra expressed a ‘quite positive’ stance. He highlighted strong earnings visibility for the next two to three years, driven by a confluence of factors including tariff hikes, premiumisation of its customer base, and growing traction in its fixed wireless access (FWA) services. While acknowledging that valuations are not cheap compared to historical or global peers, he believes they are justified by robust earnings visibility and increasing free cash flow generation, which should lead to higher dividend payouts.
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Jio gains 19.5 lakh users in August; Airtel steady, Vodafone Idea loses moreMalhotra also downplayed the significance of transient subscriber data, stating that the more critical metric for Bharti is the organic upgradation of its existing 2G subscribers to 4G. To track this premiumisation trend, he advised investors to monitor metrics like rising data consumption per user, growth in the proportion of post-paid subscribers, and updates on its converged offering, Airtel Black.
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On Jio, he stated that its financial performance is expected to be largely similar to Bharti’s.
For the entire interview, watch the accompanying video
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