Business Standard

GMR builds cash pile on divestment plank

At a time when several firms are facing insolvency, some have been able to re structure their debt. Inaf our-parts eries, starting with G MR, Business Standard finds out how these companies over came the hump, though the road to recovery is still precario

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On November 8, 2016, the GMR Group signed an agreement with the Goa government for developing an internatio­nal airport. The event was preceded by months of speculatio­n that the group would divests take in its airport portfolio. But, asitturned­out, GMR hadfurther entrenched itself in thisbusine­ss, 10years afteritsta­rted operating Delhi Internatio­nal AirportLtd(DIAL).

Areasontha­t G MR Infrastruc­ture has been able to em bark on ~8,400-crorecapit­al expenditur­e in its airport business lies in its“asset light andassetri­ght” strategyth­at startedin2­012. Ithelpedth­e group reduce gross debt by 48 percent and net debt by more than half to ~14,308 cr or eat the endofMarch­2017, from ~31, 887 crorein 2015 -16.

“Having focused on reduction of debt, it is not that the group lost sight of the growth story. The GMR airport segment had grown substantia­lly last year, with profit increasing by ~166 crore to ~869 crore. This is the first time that both our airports (Delhi and Hyderabad) have proposed a substantia­l dividend to GMR Airport Ltd,” said Madhu Tedal, group chief financial officer, GMR.

According to Tedal, GMR was one of the first companies to work with lenders on “unstable and stressed” assets and took steps towards longterm solutions based on the Reserve Bank of India guidelines. Intheenerg­y segment, too, asmall turn around was achieved, with G MR War or a Energy achieving a net profit of ~143 cr ore for the first time in the quarter ended June2017.

DEALING WITH DEBT PART - 1

At ~42,410 crore, the group’s gross debt peaked in 2014-15, primarily due to expansion in airport and energy segments. Of total gross debt, airport debt is ~8,300 crore (31 per cent), corporate debt is ~ 3,900 crore (25 per cent), highways debt is ~3,300 crore (21 per cent), energy assets debt at ~3,000 crore (20 per cent), and another ~1,300 crore (3 per cent) from other segments.

What made debt reduction possible for GMR was sell-off of eight projects that helped it raise ~11,700 crore over four years. The group went for statutory debt restructur­ing (SDR) in its Chhattisga­rh and Rajahmundr­y (Andhra Pradesh) power projects, leading to reduction of ~12,600 crore of debt. Lenders took over 52 per cent in the coal-based Chhattisga­rh plant after converting debt of ~2,992 crore into equity of a total debt of ~8,800 crore, inclusive of accrued interest. In the gas-based Rajahmundr­y plant, lenders now hold 55 per cent after converting ~1,414 crore debt into equity, of a total debt of ~3,800 crore. The group divested stake in the airport segment, too. The infrastruc­ture major sold off 40 per cent in Turkey’s Istanbul Sabiha Gokçen Internatio­nal Airport to its joint venture, partner, Malaysia Airport Holdings, for ^225 million ($306 million or ~1,896 crore) in 2013. It offloaded a power plant in Singapore and coal mines in South Africa. According to a GMR spokespers­on, the total capital released through asset monetisati­on in the past 12 months is ~2,400 crore.

Airport revenue was also helped by the arbitratio­n award for Maldives Airport in October 2016, under which it received compensati­on of $270 million (~1,800 crore). In 2012, the Maldives government ousted GMR from Male Internatio­nal Airport Ltd. The compensati­on covered the debt, equity invested in the project and a return of 17 per cent, beside terminatio­n payments and legal costs.

While the entire amount raised through divestment has been utilised for debt servicing, the focus has moved from asset growth to cash flow generation. According to Tedal, GMR was one of the first companies to work with the lenders, for unstable and stressed assets, taking effective steps towards long-term solutions. He said the leverage ratios of the group had significan­tly improved over 2016-17. The net debt to earnings ratio improved to 4.3, against 10.2 the previous year. And, the net debt to equity ratio improved to 1.6. According to IDFC Securities, strategic capital infusion of $300 million by Malaysia-based Tenaga in GMR Energy and the two SDRs are positives for the group. “Profitabil­ity of the two operating power plants of EMCO and Kamalanga has improved due to favourable rate orders and should improve further if led by higher plant loan factors,” it said. The 90 per cent cut in aero tariffs at DIAL, however, would be a significan­t drag on earnings, though unlikely to impact DIAL’s debt service ability, given its cash balance of ~31,500 crore and since there is no principal repayment due till 2022, the report added. Though debt reduction and strong growth in air traffic has helped the group, corporate debt of ~4,400 crore, ex-foreign currency convertibl­e bonds of ~2,000 crore are negatives, said the report. “It is very important to underline the fact that keeping in policy objective of the central bank and the central government, GMR has made a significan­t effort to move away from its dependence on bank finance to the internatio­nal market as well as of the bond markets,” Tedal told analysts after the quarter ended June.

According to a spokespers­on, the group with interest in five airports is now pursuing growth strategy in this segment, while consolidat­ing the energy business. It intends to divest the highways business.

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