Business Standard

Despite setback, JSW Steel on asset-buying spree

- ADITI DIVEKAR

Sajjan Jindal-led JSW Steel’s hopes of bringing in additional capacity through the buyout of companies undergoing insolvency resolution may not have fructified, but the company continues to look at investment opportunit­ies in the domestic and overseas market.

Last week, Jindal announced two investment­s of $600 million in the US. It is also looking at Europe for more investment. “Our plans for acquisitio­n in Europe are on,” Seshagiri Rao, joint managing director and group chief financial officer, JSW Steel, said.

This is not the first time Jindal has been on an assetbuyin­g spree. In 2010, the firm had acquired Ispat Industries at Dolvi followed by Vallabh Tinplate and Welspun Maxsteel in 2014. With this, JSW Steel grew from a 14.3 million tonne in 2011 to 18.1 million tonne. It is now on a definitive way towards a 40 millionton­ne capacity steel producer by 2025.

Though both the US investment­s indicate Jindal’s expansion plans, the announceme­nts have come in at a time when US President Donald Trump has slapped high import duty on steel and aluminium to protect domestic industry. “The whole idea is to consolidat­e this facility (plates and pipes mill), which will bring steel manufactur­ing back in the US,” said Parth Jindal, director, JSW (US).

Last week, the larger investment announceme­nt in the US of around $500 million was for increasing capacity utilisatio­ns of its existing one million-tonne plant in Texas, while the other $81-million investment was towards acquisitio­n of Acero Junction Holdings, a Delaware Corporatio­n.

The turnaround of its US plates and pipes mill took some time. Acquired in 2007, Jindal’s $1.2-billion investment towards the mills came under criticism for its timing

Last week, Jindal announced two investment­s of $600 million in the US

and enterprise valuations. However, the company continued to own the plant not doing much for it. After a tough business journey for a decade, the Texas mill has got a breather as it got a road map chalked out to triple its utilisatio­ns by March 2020.

JSW Steel was one of the aggressive bidders for companies undergoing insolvency proceeding­s. It is, however, likely to take control of only Monnet Ispat in a tie-up with AION Capital Partners. In the case of Bhushan Steel, the company has lost out the deal to Tata Steel, the country’s oldest steel producer.

Notwithsta­nding the setback in bidding for the NCLT assets, Jindal is going all out to grab the low-hanging opportunit­ies whether in domestic or global market, or whether green or brownfield expansion touching every corner of the matrix.

The company on Monday through a release said it had joined Nu Metal & Steel in submitting a binding bid for Essar Steel, which was under the corporate insolvency resolution proceeding­s.

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