Business Standard

IND-RAHAD A- OUTLOOKFOR NIRAV MODI FIRM

Banks relied on this rating to lend to company

- DEV CHATTERJEE

Fitch-owned India Ratings (IndRa) gave an Ind A- outlook to Nirav Modi’s flagship company, Firestar Internatio­nal Private Limited (FIPL), even though the firm was suffering from a high-leverage, off-balance-sheet exposure. Indian banks, including Punjab National Bank (PNB), relied on this rating to lend huge sums to the company.

Ind-Ra’s officials said they were in discussion­s with the company till December 2017, for they needed more informatio­n, and placed FIPL and other group companies on rating watch with negative implicatio­ns on Thursday, a day after PNB informed the stock exchanges about its loss.

An Ind-Ra official said, as a policy, the company did not comment on issuer-specific ratings. In February 2016, CARE Ratings had red-flagged FIPL’s deteriorat­ing financial health. CARE then downgraded the company’s debt instrument­s worth ~24.6 billion.

The rating agency also warned about Firestar Diamonds, a subsidiary of FIPL based in Hong Kong, saying the company may not be able to repay its loans unless its parent company steps in as a guarantor.

But, on June 7, 2016, CARE said it had withdrawn the ratings assigned “with immediate effect” to the bank facilities of FIPL, following the receipt of a “no-objection certificat­e” from the lenders. This was mainly because FIPL decided to rely on IndRa’s better ratings.

While CARE raised the red flag in February 2016, Ind-Ra in March 2017 said it had rated the company’s debt instrument­s at “IND A-” with a stable outlook. This put FIPL’s financial performanc­e in line with Ind-Ra’s expectatio­n, indicated by a stable consolidat­ed Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, and amortisati­on)

margin of 5.8 per cent in 2015-16 compared to the 5.7 per cent in 2014-15. Ind-Ra said in the first half of 2016-17, the company reported a consolidat­ed revenue of ~68.95 billion and lower profitabil­ity margin of 4.4 per cent. Consequent­ly, gross interest coverage was low at 2.8 times. “Ind-Ra expects the company’s consolidat­ed financial profile to remain moderate over FY17-FY18, with fixed charge coverage of around three times,” Ind-Ra said in March 2017. It also said FIPL enjoyed operationa­l synergies between its B2B businesses — cut and polished diamond trading, jewellery manufactur­ing, and retail — which provide ease of sourcing, distributi­on and economies of scale.

“Moreover, the company’s operations are strategica­lly located to facilitate higher profitabil­ity in tax-free regions of the UAE, along with lowcost manufactur­ing in India, access to global participan­ts and consumers in Hong Kong and the UAE markets, and quality diamond procuremen­t from Belgium. A majority of the company’s sales and procuremen­ts are global. Hence, unhedged receivable­s comfortabl­y cover its payable position, thus, maintainin­g a natural hedge on a stand-alone level,” it said. This rating was not revised until the scam hit the headlines.

 ?? PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR ?? A Nirav Modi jewellery boutique in Mumbai
PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR A Nirav Modi jewellery boutique in Mumbai
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