89325 Investors following Bharti Airtel. Share this News with them.
0
Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
Mittal's Africa call finally connecting
Persistence is paying off for Sunil Bharti Mittal, the chairman of Bharti Airtel. The billionaire founder of Bharti is finally close to realising his dreams of building a major presence in Africa with a deal to pay USD 9 billion for Kuwaiti group Zain's assets in 15 African countries.
Mittal, 52, who graduated from university in the northern state of Punjab, saw an opportunity in Indian telecoms when the sector was opened up for private participation in the mid-1990s.
At the time, Bharti was a rank outsider in a business that attracted many of India's mightiest corporate groups including the Tatas, the Birlas and the Ambani family's Reliance.
Expectations were low for a company armed with just one licence to operate a mobile network in Delhi and whose only connection with telecoms was making push-button telephones.
Mittal kept on buying stakes and licences to expand Bharti's coverage nationwide, building his New Delhi-based firm into India's leading mobile operator with nearly a quarter of the world's fastest-growing wireless market.
Along the way he brought high-profile partners into a diversified group of businesses with interests including retail and financial services.
Singapore Telecommunications, Southeast Asia's biggest phone firm, owns about 30 percent of Bharti Airtel. Other partners for his businesses include Wal-Mart, Axa and Del Monte Pacific.
Mittal is the second of three sons of a politician and is himself known to be politically well-connected. Like most Indians Mittal has strong family ties, and his brothers work with him at Bharti, although his top lieutenants are outsiders.
A yoga and golf enthusiast who sports close-cropped hair, Mittal foregoes meat before a big venture, and has said he followed a vegetarian diet up until September 30 last year, the deadline for talks between MTN and Bharti.