Qatar Telecom — trading as Ooredoo — filed a tender offer for all outstanding American Depositary Receipts of PT Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, the Indonesian telecommunications operator in which it already holds a 65% controlling stake. The filing, submitted to US regulators this week, marks the final step in a privatization that began structurally in 2008 and operationally in 2022 when Indosat merged with Hutchison's local unit. No price was disclosed in the initial filing, though the ADRs last traded at $19.40 per share in thin over-the-counter volume, implying a full equity valuation near $6.1 billion for the consolidated entity.
Indosat operates Indonesia's second-largest mobile network by subscribers, with roughly 102 million customers across prepaid and postpaid segments as of Q4 2024. The company generated $2.8 billion in trailing revenue and $940 million in EBITDA, with free cash flow margins near 18% after capital expenditures tied to 4G densification and early 5G rollouts in Jakarta and Surabaya. Ooredoo's decision to tender for the minority float — held primarily by US institutional investors and Jakarta-based family offices — follows a pattern established by Gulf state-linked telcos seeking full operational control over Asian assets as regional subscriber growth plateaus and regulatory scrutiny intensifies at home.
The privatization removes a liquidity overhang that has suppressed Indosat's multiple since the Hutchison merger, when post-deal integration delays and tower lease disputes pushed the ADRs down 31% from their 2021 highs. More importantly, it clears the path for Ooredoo to redirect Indosat's cashflow — which runs at roughly $720 million annually before shareholder distributions — toward debt reduction at the parent level. Ooredoo Group carried $7.2 billion in net debt as of December 2024, with a consolidated leverage ratio of 2.4x EBITDA, elevated by capital commitments in Algeria and Tunisia where political risk has compressed valuations. Taking Indosat private also insulates the Indonesian unit from quarterly earnings volatility that has plagued Gulf telcos facing new spectrum auction requirements and government-mandated price caps across the Middle East.
The timing is deliberate. Indonesia's telecommunications regulator is expected to auction 3.5 GHz spectrum for 5G expansion in Q3 2025, with minimum bids estimated at $1.1 billion for nationwide coverage rights. Ooredoo has publicly committed to participating, but financing that outlay through Indosat's balance sheet — rather than upstream dividends — requires full ownership to avoid minority shareholder friction over capital allocation. Separately, the delisting eliminates US disclosure obligations that have exposed Indosat's contract structures with Huawei and ZTE, relationships under increasing scrutiny from Washington as the US pushes Jakarta toward Open RAN architectures ahead of the 2026 spectrum renewal cycle.
Allocators should monitor three developments: the final tender price, expected within 14 days per SEC filing rules; any counterbid from sovereign wealth funds or regional telcos — Singtel and Axiata have both expressed interest in Indonesian consolidation — and the use of proceeds from Indosat's expected tower sale, which could unlock $800 million in Q2 2025 if American Tower or Helios agree to lease-extension terms. Ooredoo has indicated it will retain Indosat's fiber unit, which serves 4.2 million enterprise customers and carries the highest ARPU in the Indonesian market.
The tender filing landed the same week Qatar's sovereign wealth fund disclosed a $430 million equity injection into Ooredoo Group, the third such capital call since 2022.