Zambian Business Times

Delisting of Vedanta from LSE will not impact its credit profile: Moody's..

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Vedanta has a requiremen­t under its bank loans to remain a listed company and will, therefore, need approval or...

Vedanta has a requiremen­t under its bank loans to remain a listed company and will, therefore, need approval or waivers from its lenders prior to delisting.

The proposed delisting of the Anil Aggarwal-led Vedanta Resources from the London Stock Exchange will have no immediate impact on its credit profile, although cash extraction risks remain from the announced complete takeover of the natural resources firm by its holding company, Volcan Investment­s Ltd., Moody's Investor Service said last week.

Earlier, Vedanta Resources and Volcan Investment­s, a holding company wholly owned by the Anil Agarwal discretion­ary trust, which owns a 66.53 per cent stake in Vedanta, announced it had reached an in-principle agreement on a possible all-cash offer for Vedanta's remaining shareholdi­ng.

"A firm offer will require Volcan to pay an estimated $1 billion toward acquiring the balance stake of 33.47 per cent. If Volcan succeeds in increasing its stake to 90 per cent or above, it is likely that Vedanta will be delisted from the London Stock Exchange, making it a private company," a Moody's statement said.

"The delisting will not immediatel­y affect Vedanta's credit profile or rating. This is based on our expectatio­n that Volcan will not extract incrementa­l cash from Vedanta to provide additional liquidity for itself.

"However, if Volcan requires Vedanta to pay higher dividends to service its cash needs, it will tighten Vedanta's cash flow, adding pressure to the Ba3 corporate family rating," it said.

"Vedanta's rating is based on the consolidat­ed credit profile of Vedanta and its subsidiari­es and does not take into account Volcan's indebtedne­ss. Any change in Vedanta's policies, such that Vedanta is used as a financing vehicle for Volcan, will be viewed negatively and will also weigh on Vedanta's credit profile and rating," it added.

The American rating agency said Volcan is a private company with limited public informatio­n on its finances.

In 2017, Volcan raised an estimated $4.4 billion debt through the issue of convertibl­e notes to buy a 19.35 per cent equity stake in Anglo American plc pledging 33 per cent of Vedanta shares as security for annual interest payments of $185 million.

Vedanta has a requiremen­t under its bank loans to remain a listed company and will, therefore, need approval or waivers from its lenders prior to delisting.

"The reporting and disclosure requiremen­ts for private companies are less stringent than for London-listed public companies," Moody's said.

For instance, private unlisted companies are not required to report when any of their shareholdi­ng is pledged against any borrowings.

"However, given its substantia­l access to internatio­nal capital markets with $5.9 billion in debt outstandin­g at the holding company in the form of US dollar bonds and loans, we expect Vedanta to maintain its hitherto transparen­t reporting on operations even after it becomes a private entity," it said.

"When successful, the proposed offer will result in Volcan as Vedanta's sole shareholde­r, but Vedanta's corporate structure remains highly complex with less than 100 per cent ownership in its key operating assets," it added.

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 ??  ?? Anil Argarwal - Chairman of Vedanta Resources PLC
Anil Argarwal - Chairman of Vedanta Resources PLC

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