Business Standard

Deleveragi­ng infrastruc­ture for Future growth

- ABHINEET KUMAR

Future Retail, the flagship firm of the Kishore Biyani-led Future Group, has been the best-performing retail stock this year, with 326 per cent gain in market value to ~26,807 crore on the BSE. The stock surged as investors cheered operationa­l gains following Biyani’s restructur­ing plan that has seen emergence of four companies out of erstwhile Pantaloon Retail.

The Future Group operates through its retail arm, Future Retail; new fashion retail business, Future Lifestyle Fashions; the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) business, Future Consumer Enterprise­s; and retail infrastruc­ture business Future Enterprise­s.

A pioneer of modern retail in India, Biyani racked up unmanageab­le debt on the books of his flagship firm Pantaloon Retail, as it continued funding loss-making stores, which resulted in the company having to sell its fashion retail business to Aditya Birla Nuvo in April 2012 for ~1,600 crore. Before the selloff, debt for Pantaloon Retail had ballooned to ~7,692 crore when the company ended its financial year in June 2011. At that level, debt was 2.6 times the company’s equity of ~3,004 crore, making it unsustaina­ble. The company then had a market value of ~6,168 crore. The company earlier followed July-June cycle for financial year but has now changed its financial year to March-ending.

Following the divestment of fashion retail business under Pantaloon Retail, the group eventually got restructur­ed into four companies which are currently valued at ~45,149 crore. Other three companies — Future Consumer, Future Lifestyle Fashions and Future Enterprise­s — have also added another ~11,804 crore of market cap this year.

While the consolidat­ed debt of retail companies at ~7,684 crore remains at the same level, the equity has increased more than three times to ~9,162. This has brought debt-equity ratio to a comfortabl­e 0.8.

Majority of this debt, ~5,286 crore, sits on the books of retail infrastruc­ture company Future Enterprise­s. With equity of ~3,797 crore, this company still has its debtequity at 1.4. However, Future Enterprise­s is expected to benefit when other businesses of the group scale up. This will help it generate enough cash to repay debt.

“De-merger of the retail infrastruc­ture has transforme­d Future Retail into an assetlight business,” said Nillai Shah, analyst with Morgan Stanley India, in its report early this year. Future Retail has indeed become asset-light with ~1,244-crore debt, which is less than half of ~2,554 crore equity.

Future Consumer and Future Lifestyle Fashions have also equally benefitted from this restructur­ing as their debtequity ratios are 0.5 and 0.4, respective­ly.

The restructur­ing of the retail empire has come with Biyani’s target of increasing revenue five times to ~1 lakh crore from ~22,000 crore, set in June 2015. The plan includes target of 10,000 neighbourh­ood stores. This is expected to bring in ~40,000-crore revenue in FY21.

It is also targeting ~20,000 crore of annual revenue by manufactur­ing FMCG, which would be sold both in its own stores as well as at other retailers. While Future Retail reported net sales of ~17,980 crore in the last financial year ending March, the four companies together had revenue of ~28,689 crore. This is up from ~12,888-crore net sales for erstwhile Pantaloon Retail in the financial year ending June 2011. “The group has made a course correction in the past five to seven years, moving away from reckless to profitable growth,” said Arvind Singhal, chairman and managing director at management consultanc­y firm Technopak. Biyani has now changed his approach and is aiming to make the group companies debt-free, barring short-term working capital loans, and is strongly focused on profitable growth.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Kishore Biyani at a warehouse operated by Future Supply Chain Solutions in Nagpur.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Kishore Biyani at a warehouse operated by Future Supply Chain Solutions in Nagpur.
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