Millennium Post

Shareholde­rs to pay 25% for subscribin­g to RIL’S `53,125 crore right issue now, balance next year

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NEW DELHI: Reliance Industries shareholde­rs will have to pay only 25 per cent for subscribin­g to the company’s mega Rs 53,125-crore rights issue, and the balance will have to be paid in two installmen­ts in May and November next year, the company said.

Oil-to-telecom conglomera­te’s rights issue will open for subscripti­on of shareholde­rs on May 20 and will close on June 3. One share will be offered for every 15 shares held at Rs 1,257.

Of the Rs 1,257 per share price, only 25 per cent is to be paid at the time of subscripti­on. A similar amount will be due for payment in May 2021 and the balance 50 per cent has to be paid in November 2021, the company said in a regulatory filing.

“The rights issue committee of the board of directors, in its meeting held on May 17, 2020, has proposed the following schedule for payment of the balance amount of Rs 942.75 per rights equity share - Rs 314.25 i.e. 25 per cent in May 2021; and Rs 628.50 i.e. the balance 50 per cent in November 2021,” it said.a

The board, it said, would make the calls for this purpose at the relevant time.

Billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s firm had on April 30 announced fund raising of Rs 53,125 crore by way of a 1:15 rights issue - India’s biggest and first such issue by the firm in nearly three decades.

One share will be offered for every 15 shares held at Rs 1,257, a 14 per cent discount to the closing price for April

30. Reliance Industries’ share price has since risen to Rs 1,458.90 (Friday’s closing price), but rights issue price remains the same.

Typically, cash-strapped companies use rights issues to raise money when they really need it. In these rights offerings, companies grant shareholde­rs the right, but not the obligation, to buy new shares at a discount to the current trading price.

But for Reliance Industries (RIL), it is not about raising funds as it has significan­t liquidity with USD 23.4 billion of cash and equivalent.

It is being seen as an attempt to reward the shareholde­rs, cut debt at the group and promoters faith in the Reliance growth story. Promoter Ambani family has under-written the entire rights issue, pledging to buy shares that are unsubscrib­ed.

The last time RIL tapped the public for funds was in 1991 when it had issued convertibl­e debentures. The debentures were subsequent­ly converted into equity shares at Rs 55 apiece.

Mukesh Ambani had in August last year unveiled plans to cut debt to zero by 2021. As part of this plan, RIL has been seeking strategic partnershi­ps across its businesses while targeting to deleverage the balance sheet.

At the end of March quarter, RIL had an outstandin­g debt of Rs 3,36,294 crore. It also had cash in hand of Rs 1,75,259 crore, bringing the net debt position to Rs 1,61,035 crore.

As part of its balance sheet deleveragi­ng plans, Reliance has sold minority stake in its digital unit, Jio Platforms to likes of Facebook.

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