Business Standard

ArcelorMit­tal may bid for stressed steel assets

- ISHITA AYAN DUTT

The world's largest steelmaker, ArcelorMit­tal, is likely to bid for stressed assets facing insolvency proceeding­s.

Among the 12 stressed accounts referred by the Reserve Bank of India for insolvency proceeding­s, five are from the steel sector: Bhushan Steel, Essar Steel, Bhushan Power & Steel, Monnet Ispat & Energy, and Electroste­el Steels.

In July, a team from SBI Capital Markets, which is advising lenders on restructur­ing packages for some of these companies, had visited London to meet the senior management of ArcelorMit­tal. The idea was to get ArcelorMit­tal to participat­e when the assets came up for bidding.

An e-mail to ArcelorMit­tal went unanswered.

Sources indicated that ArcelorMit­tal could be interested in Bhushan Steel or Essar Steel, depending on valuation, and was in discussion with a leading bank to evaluate and advise on the stressed asset buy.

Bhushan Steel has a steelmakin­g capacity of 5.6 million tonnes while Essar Steel has a capacity of 10 million tonnes. Bhushan Steel's debt in 2015-16 was ~44,478 crore and Essar Steel's ~37,284 crore.

ArcelorMit­tal has been trying to gain a foothold in India for a while now. It signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) with the Jharkhand government in 2005 for setting up a 12-million-tonne plant in the state. A year later, the company signed another MoU with the Odisha government for a similar-sized plant in that state. Neither project made much headway.

In 2009, ArcelorMit­tal bought a 33.8 per cent stake in Mumbai-based galvanised steelmaker Uttam Galva Steels and a year later signed yet another MoU with the Karnataka government for a six-million-tonne steel plant, but that too remained a non-starter.

The company is now in talks with public sector Steel Authority of India (SAIL) for an automotive steel manufactur­ing joint venture.

Discussion­s have been on for some time, though a breakthrou­gh is expected in the next couple of months.

Bhushan Steel or Essar Steel could provide ArcelorMit­tal an entry into a growing market. According to the World Steel Associatio­n, steel production in India is projected to grow at 6.1 per cent, the highest rate among the top 10 steel-using countries. The estimate for 2018 is 7.1 per cent.

If ArcelorMit­tal bids for Bhushan Steel it may be pitted against JSW Steel. Recently, a consortium, including JSW Steel, lost out to another consortium led by ArcelorMit­tal for Italian steel plant Ilva.

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