Business Standard

Vedanta Resources delisting to complete by September end

- ADITI DIVEKAR

With Vedanta Resources engaged in delisting process, which it expects to complete by September end, the newly-appointed Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Srinivasan Venkatakri­shnan has already chalked out a plan for the entity.

“After delisting, which is a simple process and will take only another three-four weeks, our focus would be on sweating all our assets across businesses in Vedanta and also make sure that the planned investment­s take place properly,” Anil Agarwal, founder and chairman of Vedanta Resources, told Business Standard in a telephonic conversati­on after the announceme­nt of Venkatakri­shnan’s appointmen­t.

Vedanta Resources is the holding company of Vedanta, with 51 per cent stake in the latter. Vedanta is one of the largest diversifie­d natural resources firms in the world having presence in crude oil, power, copper, aluminium, zinc, lead, and iron ore.

In July, Agarwal announced his plans to delist the flagship firm Vedanta Resources from the London Stock Exchange after buying out 33.5 per cent of non-promoter shareholde­rs for about $1 billion. Currently, Agarwal’s Volcan Investment­s holds 66.53 per cent of Vedanta Resources and has made a cash offer for 825 pence a share.

Vedanta plans to invest around $8 billion (about ~560 billion) in various business verticals over the next three years. The company aims to fund this capex largely via internal accruals at a time when its cash profit front after dividend payouts is less than half the planned capex for every year over the threeyear period.

“Operations of Vedanta are on the correct side of the cost curve and as you pull down cost, the cash flows will improve,” Venkatakri­shnan said. “The key focus will be on keeping costs in control and thereby be the highest margin generator. Ongoing cost optimisati­on and operationa­l efficiency improvemen­t are also in place and along with Brownfield expansions, the company will get the desired dividends,” he added.

A $8-billion (~560 billion) capex for Vedanta over three years would be ~186.6 billion of capex every year. However, since two years, Vedanta has made hefty dividend payouts to its shareholde­rs, which rose from ~9.6 billion in 2013-14 to ~78.8 billion in 2017-18, bringing down its cash profits.

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