Business Standard

Russian firms expand footprint in India

Take bigger steps to do business with India’s private sector

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

If you are not clued in, it’s unlikely you have heard of the VTB Group. It owns the second-largest bank in Russia, is known for its closeness to President Vladimir Putin and the government there, and, above all, is a financial powerhouse with a sprawling investment banking business.

Just a few days ago, group company VTB Capital tied the knot with the Ruias and is planning to bid jointly for debt-ridden Essar Steel, which is being put on the market by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT).

This is not its first tryst with the Indian private sector. It has done business with the Ruias and the GMR Group by providing them funds to finance their delisting as well as their debt. And the group is among the top five on the Bloomberg list of top merger and acquisitio­n dealmakers in India last year, because it partly financed Rosneft’s deal to buy out Essar Oil.

VTB is not alone. A bevy of Russian companies are now taking firmer steps to do business with India’s private sector companies after decades of working with only the government or state-owned behemoths.

These include private equity (PE) funds run by Russia’s wellknown oligarchs like Yuri Milner and Leonid Boguslavsk­y, oil and gas major Rosneft, heavy engineerin­g giant Uralmash (which has announced a joint venture with SRB Internatio­nal to manufactur­e heavy equipment for the mining and steel industry), top bank Sberbank as well as Sistema JSFC (despite the telecom fiasco), which is straddling retailing, PE, and telecommun­ications.

And for the first time, Russian defence companies have taken tentative steps by announcing a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) with the country’s top companies such as Larsen & Toubro, Reliance Infrastruc­ture, and Bharat Forge. Summing up the new trend, Vsevolod Rozanov, chief financial officer of Sistema JSFC, who has also spent over three years in the country, says: “For decades, Russian companies preferred to deal with the government or state-owned corporatio­ns. We are now seeing the initial stages of change when they are learning to understand and do business with the Indian private sector.”

Russia’s largest investment in the private sector has been through Rosneft, which, with their partners UCB and commodity trading giant Trafigura, bought Essar Oil at a staggering $13 billion. Those involved in the deal say that being a government-controlled company its decision to enter India was clearly “strategic” and the go ahead has to come from the Kremlin. However, says an executive involved in the deal: “While they do their due diligence in amazing detail, the price negotiatio­ns, unlike with other corporates in the US and Europe, are not very protracted and don’t take months and years. They know exactly how much to pay and what they want to do with the assets.”

Analysts say that with the Russian government facing sanctions from the US and Europe after their invasion in Ukraine, there was a need to hedge their bets in oil. India provided the opportunit­y and Rosneft took only 49 per cent so that it was insulated against any sanctions in the future. It is estimated that Rosneft met 20 per cent of oil requiremen­ts of Europe in 2015.

Sberbank, the largest Russian bank, has been around for four years, but had not been making much headway, and had high non-performing assets. But last year it changed tack. Rather than providing loans to local companies, it decided to fund joint ventures with Russian and Indian companies. So now it is providing around $400 million for a project of Tata Power in eastern Europe. The Indian company has signed up with Siberian Coal Energy Co to mine coal and even set up a dedicated port in Russia. The bank is also offering to fund direct imports of gold as it sees large potential in the country. After all, Russia has some of the largest gold reserves in the world.

It is the PE fund space that has attracted a lot of attention. Russian companies have fanned out across the globe and India has been a key target. Sistema, for instance, has decided to increase the size of its Asia Fund to $120 million from a mere $50 million. It is for the first time roping in Indian high net worth individual­s to put in money in the fund. Rozanov says it will now go for bigger ticket investment­s with shorter exits (three to four years, instead of seven years) and not put in money only in risky venture capital funding. Yuri Milner, who shot into the limelight by backing internet giants Facebook, Twitter, and Alibaba in their earlier stages, has spread his PE empire in India too. He made his first entry in 2014 with a bang when his company DST Global led a $250-million funding in Flipkart, followed in 2015 by Ola, in which it led a consortium that put in $315 million. Milner has also taken bets in other start-ups such as Practo, Craftsvill­a, and Ratan Tata backed home rental company NestAway Technologi­es.

Keeping him company has been Boguslavsk­y, whose company Ru-Net has made a substantia­l bet in the country with investment­s in Snapdeal and FreeCharge, among others.

With a net worth of $1.2 billion, Forbes says these two companies have been among his successful ventures.

Yet there have also been some serious challenges to collaborat­ion between private companies, especially in defence, an area in which India is being opened up to foreign direct investment. According to estimates, Russia, between 2012 and 2016, accounted for 68 per cent of India’s arms imports. But Russian companies have been lukewarm to business with the private sector. Says a top executive of an Indian company that has signed deals with Russian firms: “Russian defence companies are quite clear that they prefer to deal with the government and public sector undertakin­gs as they are not confident of transferri­ng technology to the private sector. And they prefer direct exports rather than Make In India. Most of these MoUs have not gone forward at all.”

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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