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Reliance’s energy business could add $50b in market cap in 2022

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Global investment banking firm Morgan Stanley has said that Reliance Industries is on a path toward a $20 billion+ Ebitda run rate inflection, which could be supported by five major factors. Besides the firm’s new energy business could add $50 billion in market cap in 2022.

First and foremost, refinery margins could nearly double and be sustained at high levels for the next half decade, with global fuel markets seeing sustained lower supply due to a lack of investment­s.

The global firm sees telecom average revenue per user (ARPU) rising, quality of subscriber­s improving and churn falling and Reliance guided for normalisat­ion ahead as one recharge cycle is behind.

Thereater, the global gas market could tighten further as producer discipline remains with rising domestic gas production.

Rising traction on digital commerce with 193 million subscriber­s and consistent 20 per cent revenue contributi­on would expand margins.

Lastly, superior petrochemi­cal spreads in olefin and PVC as global cost curves are uplited, and supply should add to unwinding.

“Investors appear highly sceptical, especially on sustainabi­lity of the energy upcycle and potential demand destructio­n, but we see enough buffers on demand/global inventorie­s along with supply discipline to drive multi-year outperform­ance,” the global investment firm said in a report.

Indian tycoon Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries spent almost $1bn in the first quarter of this year on investment­s in renewable energy, fashion and ecommerce companies as the conglomera­te works to diversify away from fossil fuels.

India’s largest listed company is increasing­ly relying on acquisitio­ns to fuel its expansion and take on Gautam Adani, an industrial­ist with one of the country’s largest renewables porfolios. It is also fending off challenges from Amazon and Walmart-owned Flipkart in the retail sector.

Reliance’s dealmaking in the first quarter of the year hit a three-year high at 10 deals, according to data from Refinitiv. Two of those deals, worth about $330mn combined, were to strengthen Reliance Retail’s ecommerce plaform, with investment­s in delivery start-up Dunzo and robotics company Addverb, which is expected to help Reliance automate its warehouses.

Reliance Industries on Friday announced annual revenues of $102 billion, a record for an Indian company. In the quarter ended March, it posted net profit atributabl­e to company owners of Rs162 billion ($2.1 billion), a 22.5 per cent rise over the same period last year that still missed analyst forecasts.

“Traditiona­lly, Reliance has always relied on building up scale and expertise in-house,” said Probal Sen, research analyst at ICICI Securities.

“That’s been a significan­t change of strategy over the last three-four years, where they have been more than happy to acquire capabiliti­es, technologi­es or infrastruc­ture that they themselves don’t have.”

Sen added that Reliance could finance huge bets on technology thanks to its triple B plus credit score — beter than India’s sovereign rating of triple B minus. He said Ambani enjoys “absolute carte blanche” from investors “not really paying atention to return ratios in the short term”.

The group’s biggest investment­s last year came from Reliance Industries, home to the oil and petrochemi­cals unit that traditiona­lly drove the conglomera­te’s profits. Last June, it launched an ambitious $10bn investment scheme to diversify away from fossil fuels.

Ambani said Reliance was planning to build four giga factories across 5,000 acres at its Jamnagar refinery complex in Gujarat to make solar panels, bateries for energy storage, electrolys­ers to produce hydrogen and fuel cells to convert it. These are supposed to help offset emissions from its fossil fuel business, ater Reliance pledged in 2020 to become “net carbon zero” by 2035.

Sodium-ion batery designer and maker Faradion was one of Reliance Industries’ biggest 2021 acquisitio­ns, at 100 million pound, plus 25 million pound in investment.

Reliance intends to use Uk-based Faradion’s technology at its factory for bateries to store energy, with the goal of manufactur­ing bateries for use in vehicles.

Faradion had not initially sought a buyout. “We were more running a fundraisin­g or investment process, and then from there [Reliance] seduced my investors with an atractive offer,” said James Quinn, Faradion’s chief executive. Reliance “moved very, very quick,” recalled Quinn. “I think from term sheet to signing was about 45 days.”

The deal made sense for both sides, said Quinn. “What Faradion does really well is innovate and advance the technology. What Reliance can do really well is large-scale industrial­isation, building very big factories and doing it cost effectivel­y.”

Refinery margins could nearly double and be sustained at high levels for the next half decade, with global fuel markets seeing sustained lower supply due to a lack of investment­s

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A customer pushes a trolley with grocery items past Reliance Jewels and Reliance Digital stores in Mumbai, India.
Reuters ↑ A customer pushes a trolley with grocery items past Reliance Jewels and Reliance Digital stores in Mumbai, India.

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