Business Standard

11 buyers line up for Jaiprakash Power

Adani, Tata, JSW Energy among those to show interest

- JYOTI MUKUL & ABHIJIT LELE

Even at a time when the power generation sector is under stress, lenders of Jaiprakash Power Ventures have managed to get as many as 11 suitors for the beleaguere­d company. Adani Power, JSW Energy and Resurgent, a joint venture of ICICI Ventures and Tata Power, are among those who have put in expression­s of interest.

While two of the Jaiprakash group companies — Jaiprakash Infrastruc­ture and Jaiprakash Associates — are under insolvency resolution, Jaiprakash Power is under strategic debt restructur­ing (SDR). A consortium of banks, including IDBI and SBI, had taken over the company last year.

The total public shareholdi­ng of the company is 68.84 per cent, which includes 51 per cent equity with lenders whose debt was restructur­ed, the company said in a filing to the BSE in January. A part of its outstandin­g debt of ~3,058 crore was converted to 30.5 million equity shares. The management control of the company continued to be with the Manoj Gaur-led group. While emails to JSW Energy and Adani spokespers­ons remained unanswered, Tata Power Managing Director Anil Sardana did not comment on the bid. Tata Power had acquired 25 per cent equity in Resurgent Power, founded by a consortium of two sovereign funds, an overseas pension fund from Canada and private equity fund ICICI Ventures.

Bidding for the buy-out of lender stake concluded earlier this week, said a person close to the developmen­t. Both Gautam Adani and Sajjan Jindal-led groups have acquired power assets in the past. Adani and Tata Power, however, have their respective Mundra mega power plants in distress.

JSW Energy had, in 2015, bought two hydropower plants of Jaiprakash Power — the 300Mw Himachal Baspa Power Company and 1,091-Mw Karcham Wangtoo at an enterprise value of ~9,575 crore. Jaiprakash Power Ventures recorded a loss of ~761 crore for year ended March 31. The company has an installed power generation capacity of 4,200 Mw, of which 400 Mw is from Jaypaee Vishnupray­ag hydropower project, while the remaining is coal-based generation. The company could not pay the outstandin­g debt to lenders. The lenders had formed a joint lenders’ forum (JLF) and formulated a corrective action plan (CAP) for the company in order to resolve its financial stress.

However, the company could not perform satisfacto­rily under the CAP, leading to the JLF finally deciding to invoke the provisions of SDR on July 25 last year. The lenders have a right to divest their equity holding to new promoters.

 ??  ?? Jaiprakash Power’s super thermal power project at Nigrie in Madhya Pradesh
Jaiprakash Power’s super thermal power project at Nigrie in Madhya Pradesh

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