Hindustan Times (Delhi)

BPCL stake sale unlikely this year

- Gulveen Aulakh

NEW DELHI: The government is unlikely to restart the disinvestm­ent process for Bharat Petroleum Corp. Ltd (BPCL) this year because of the stock market volatility and soaring energy prices, senior officials said.

“We’re not sure what the level of crude prices will be six months down the line. Going back to the drawing board and restarting the process will take time. It won’t happen at least this year,” one of the senior government officials said, requesting anonymity.

A second official said the department of investment and public asset management would focus on completing ongoing transactio­ns before reconsider­ing privatizat­ion.

State-run fuel retailers such as BPCL are racking up losses as they grapple with rising global crude oil costs and retail fuel prices that have been kept unchanged since April to cool inflation. The government has lined up over half a dozen companies for strategic sale, including Shipping Corp. of India, BEML Ltd, Nagarnar Steel Plant of NMDC and HLL Lifecare. The privatizat­ion of Central Electronic­s Ltd (CEL) and Pawan Hans Ltd is also on hold because of legal challenges.

The Centre decided to call off BPCL’S disinvestm­ent last month after interested parties could not continue due to prevailing conditions in global energy markets and the pandemic. It said the decision to reinitiate the process would be taken after a review.

The government invited expression­s of interest on 7 March 2020 to sell its 52.98% stake in the fuel retailer and refiner and transfer the management control to the buyer.

The disinvestm­ent proposal required bidders to have a net worth of $10 billion and excluded public sector units with more than 51% government ownership.

The government received bids for BPCL from miner Vedanta Resources Ltd, private equity firms Apollo Global and I Squared Capital’s Think Gas unit. Mint had reported in its April 23 edition that the government was weighing options on the strategic disinvestm­ent, including whether it needs to return to the drawing board and restart the bidding process or revise certain conditions in the existing process so that the process moves forward.

On May 19, Mint had reported that the Centre would come up with a fresh disinvestm­ent plan for the state-run energy company after the completion of the expansion of the Bina refinery in Madhya Pradesh and its green energy initiative­s of adding capacities in the solar, wind, hydrogen fuel along with 2G ethanol bio-refineries.

Mint reported that the government does not plan to sell its shareholdi­ng in parts.

BPCL was supposed to have been one of the marquee transactio­ns under the Centre’s new disinvestm­ent policy. Mint reported in January 2021 that the transactio­n could be valued at ₹90,000 crore. But the market cap of BPCL has dropped since then and may only fetch about ₹37,265 crore.

DIPAM WILL FOCUS ON COMPLETING ONGOING TRANSACTIO­NS BEFORE RECONSIDER­ING PRIVATIZAT­ION

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