Business Standard

Videocon loses one-third of market cap

- SAMIE MODAK & DEV CHATTERJEE Mumbai, 23 May

The stock of Videocon Industries fell by 34.5 per cent in the last two days as lenders sold shares pledged by its promoters against loans. The shares of the consumer durables and oil major closed at ~64.80 apiece on Tuesday.

The stock of Videocon Industries fell 34.5 per cent in the last two days as lenders sold shares pledged by its promoters against loans.

The shares of the consumer durables and oil major closed at ~64.8 apiece on Tuesday, and the company lost ~1,200 crore of its market value since Monday after Dena Bank tagged it as a non-performing asset (NPA) a few days ago.

Company officials said the firm had applied to Indian banks to extend the tenure of its debt worth ~22,000 crore after it lost a sizeable amount of funds in its telecom venture. According to the company’s estimates, it lost ~25,000 crore in its telecom arm after the Supreme Court cancelled its licences in 2012.

The flagship company owes another ~22,000 crore of loans to global banks which are serviced through revenues from its oil and gas fields overseas. “We would like to submit that Dena Bank has recently announced it had classified Videocon’s loan amounting to ~520 crore as NPA. This has resulted in some negative publicity of the company and, accordingl­y, impacted its stock price. We believe the recent crash on the stock price could be due to the classifica­tion of Videocon’s loan as NPA by Dena Bank. We are not aware of any other informatio­n which could explain the movement,” the company told BSE.

“Everything is in the dark,” says SP Tulsian, founder of sptulsian.com, an investment advisory firm. “There is not much transparen­cy about the company’s oil assets and other businesses like DTH. Also, there are doubts whether the promoters have the intention to repay the debt,” he said.

According to statistics collated from the BSE, the promoters own 66 per cent in the company and have pledged holdings worth ~1,421 crore.

At the current market price, Videocon’s market value is ~2,167 crore. Experts say stock will continue to remain under pressure as the correction would trigger liquidatio­n of pledged shares if promoters fail to cough up margin money.

Shares of the company have halved from the one-year high of ~114.9 touched in October 2016.

The company vowed to repay banks and said its immediate plan was to use profits of its Indonesian oil block to repay loans. The block is currently operated by Pertamina, an Indonesian government-owned company, which owns a majority stake in the field along with Bharat Petroleum.

Taking into account the current oil prices, Videocon’s 23 per cent share is valued at $2.5 billion. In an earlier interview, the chairman of the Videocon group, Venugopal Dhoot, said the company wanted to repeat the success of Mozambique gas field which they sold for close to $2.5 billion two years ago. “The profits from the Indonesian asset will go to Indian banks which have supported us in the past,” said Dhoot.

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