TUHIN KANTA PANDEY DIPAM secretary
“BUYERS OF AIR INDIA, BPCL WILL NOT GET A FREE HAND TO SHED EXCESS STAFF AS THE GOVT WILL BUILD IN CERTAIN PROTECTIONS TO EMPLOYEES IN THE SHARE SALE AGREEMENT”
Buyers of Air India and Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) will not get a free hand to shed excess workforce as the government will build in certain protection to employees in the share sale agreement, DIPAM Secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey said.
Public sector firms often have more people on rolls than t heir private sector counterparts and companies wanting to take them over would likely right-size them to remove inefficiencies. The Secretary of the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) said the government would follow two-stage bidding process for selling its holding in Air India and BPCL.
First preliminary interest from potential bidders is invited, followed by them being given access of data room on the companies for due diligence. In the second stage, price bids are invited.
While in the case of Air India, the expression of interest (EOI) has been invited by March 17, an offer seeking the same for BPCL is likely to be floated in the next few days. Asked if the bidders will get a free hand to right-size the companies after the acquisition, Pandey said, “There will be certain protection to employees and there will be other conditionalities and this will be listed out in the share purchase agreement (SPA).” He did not give details of the conditionalities. An SPA will signed with the acquirer who offers the highest bid for buying out government stake.
The government is selling its entire 100 per cent stake in Air India but wants effective control to stay with Indian nationals. The airline, which started as a Tata Airlines in 1932 and was later acquired by the government, has not made profits since 2007. It has a total debt of ~60,074 crore, of which bidder has to takeover ~23,286.5 crore.
In the case of BPCL, the government is selling its entire 53.29 per cent stake in the company that will give buyers ready access to 14 per cent of the oil refining capacity and about one-fifth of the fuel market share i n the world’s fastest-growing energy market.