Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Reliance Infra sends ₹5,440 crore notice to Pipavav founders

- Arushi Kotecha arushi.k@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: Anil Ambani-led Reliance Infrastruc­ture Ltd on Monday said the company and its wholly-owned subsidiary Reliance Defence Systems Pvt. Ltd have issued a ₹5,440 crore arbitratio­n notice to founder-promoters of erstwhile Pipavav Defence and Engineerin­g Ltd, citing a breach of warranties.

Exactly two years ago, Reliance Defence had bought Pipavav Defence, India’s largest shipyard, from the Gandhis of SKIL Infrastruc­ture Ltd. Later, it bought another 26% stake in the company through an open offer.

In a stock exchange filing, Reliance Infra said it is making indemnity claims of ₹5,440.38 crore under the purchase agreement dated March 4, 2015 against Nikhil and Bhavesh Gandhi and their companies SKIL Infrastruc­ture, Grevek Investment­s and Finance Pvt. Ltd, and SKIL Shipyard Holdings Pvt. Ltd.

Reliance Infra did not disclose the nature of these breaches.

“The company has discovered that there have been serious breaches of warranties and representa­tions made by t he founder-promoters (of Pipavav Defence). As per the share purchase agreement, we are entitled to claim the loss caused in an arbitratio­n,” said a person aware of the developmen­t, on condition of anonymity.

Warranties are assurances of the state of affairs and governance standards of the company, and any breach can lead to a claim.

Reliance Infra is convinced of the breaches discovered and is therefore compelled to enforce its rights, this person added.

Reliance Group declined to furnish additional details.

Calls and messages received no response from Nikhil Gandhi, founder-chairman at Pipavav Defence.

On March 4, 2015, Ambani pipped other suitors such as homegrown conglomera­te Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd, French naval defence company DCNS SA and the Munjals of the Hero Group to buy an 18% stake in debt-laden Pipavav Defence — then India’s largest shipyard with a licence to build warships — for ₹819 crore at ₹63 per share, a 17.6% discount to the prevailing share price at the time and rechristen­ed it Reliance Naval and Engineerin­g Ltd.

The company also acquired the promoters’ additional shares, in addition to the 17.6% stake, and an incrementa­l 26% stake from public shareholde­rs at ₹66 a share.

Pipavav Defence, a manufactur­er of warships, submarines and liquefied natural gas carriers, was reeling under a debt of ₹7,000 crore at the time, with the founders unable to infuse more cash into the firm.

Ambani moved quickly to seal the deal by offering cash upfront to buy out the promoters’ stakes, with an open offer to follow, in order to participat­e in the government’s impending plans to build six nuclear-powered submarines and seven stealth warships costing close to ₹1 lakh crore, Mint had reported on March 12, 2015.

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