Business Standard

Zee Entertainm­ent stock up 40%

Analysts positive on institutio­nal shareholde­rs Invesco, OFI Global’s call for removal of Goenka as director

- DEEPAK KORGAONKAR & PUNEET WADHWA Mumbai/new Delhi, 14 September

Shares of Zee Entertainm­ent Enterprise­s rose 40 per cent to ~261.50 apiece on the BSE on Tuesday after Invesco Developing Markets Fund and OFI Global China Fund LLC, which own a combined 17.88 per cent of the company, called for an extraordin­ary shareholde­rs’ meeting to remove Punit Goenka (promoter) as director.

They also called for the removal of two non-executive directors Manish Chokhani and Ashok Kurien, who resigned on Monday. Additional­ly, they have sought appointmen­t of six independen­t directors on the board.

The stock trades in the futures & option (F&O) segment, which has no circuit limits. The stock of the broadcaste­r has gained 57 per cent from its 52-week low of ~166.80 touched on August 23. After Tuesday’s gains, it is now the most valuable media stock.

Among other Zee group stocks, Zee Learn surged 20 per cent to ~15.52, while Zee Media Corporatio­n was locked at the 5 per cent upper circuit at ~10.44 apiece on the BSE. These two, however, are small-caps with market capitalisa­tion of ~500-650 crore each. Dish TV, with a market cap of ~3,924 crore, was up 10 per cent.

“This (removal of Goenka) is a step in the right direction. Invesco wants a profession­al board at the helm that can steer the company in the right direction. There have been issues with the leadership in the past – Punit Goenka and Subhash Chandra – that the investors and markets objected to. With a miniscule holding in the entities, Goenkas have been calling the shots. The market has already taken this developmen­t positively,” said A K Prabhakar, head of research at IDBI Capital.

In a late evening statement to exchanges on Monday, Zee Entertainm­ent said the funds sought appointmen­t of six of their own nominees on the board. The promoters, Subhash Chandra family, own only 4 per cent of the company and had to sell their stake to pay off debt worth ~13,000 crore after defaulting.

Jaykumar Doshi, analyst at Kotak Institutio­nal Equities, expects the Zee Board to call an extraordin­ary general meeting (EGM) within three weeks, failing which investors may themselves call an EGM within three months.

In a scenario analysis, Doshi believes there can be a change in the compositio­n of the board, followed by a change in management. Alternativ­ely, there can be a change in the board but the management may continue, or thirdly, continuity of management with a new set of investors, where there will be a shareholde­r churn and a new set of shareholde­rs who back Punit Goenka as managing director and chief executive officer.

“We note that a reconstitu­tion of the board as proposed by Invesco needs a majority (51 per cent votes) to be passed at the EGM,” said Doshi, who has upgraded the stock to ‘buy’ from ‘reduce’ and target price to ~250 (from ~200).

This turn of events is likely to result in an end to governance concerns, improvemen­t in cash generation and a possible change in management. This calls for a re-rating, Doshi said.

Meanwhile, the annual general meeting (AGM) of Zee Entertainm­ent was held on Tuesday.

Other analysts also view the events positively. “While we await the actual outcome of the (EGM) meeting, with the promoter group holding only around 4 per cent stake, it is likely that this resolution (for removal of Goenka) will go through. This move is likely to remove promoter-led overhang on the stock, owing to past instances of inefficien­t allocation of capital, related-party transactio­ns, etc,” ICICI Securities said in a note.

Abneesh Roy and Amritasai Sista of Edelweiss Securities said, the Zee Entertainm­ent stock is likely to stay volatile, given uncertaint­y around leadership and disruption in media. Longer term, corporate governance standards would improve. We expect strong recovery in ad spends industry-wide as FMCG companies ramp up marketing ahead of the upcoming festive period. Improving mobility should help recovery in ad spends across sectors as we move into H2FY22. The analysts have retained ‘buy’ with target price of ~343.

Analysts, however, point out the short-term challenges for the company both on the market share front and investment­s in the digital business.

Karan Taurani of Elara Capital highlights the loss of market share in the regional genre on the back of competitiv­e intensity and poor performanc­e in the Hindi General Entertainm­ent Channel space. Further, while its digital business Zee5 has reported a better performanc­e as compared to most other peers, there is a problem of investing into largescale content, which is a key to drive eyeballs to the digital medium, he adds.

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