Business Standard

Navi Mumbai airport: Focus now on fundraisin­g

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA, ANEESH PHADNIS & RAGHAVENDR­A KAMATH write

Focus on the Navi Mumbai airport has shifted to the GVK-led consortium’s ability to raise more funds for the ~16,000-crore project. The project monitoring panel of the Maharashtr­a government has finally approved the group’s financial bid. The matter now goes to the state cabinet. The first phase is expected to require an investment of ~5,500 crore.

Focus on the Navi Mumbai airport has shifted to the GVK led consortium’s ability to raise more funds for the ~16,000-crore project.

The project monitoring panel of the Maharashtr­a government has finally approved the group’s financial bid. The matter now goes to the state cabinet.

The first phase is expected to require an investment of ~5,500 crore, for capacity of 10 million passengers annually. It is to be completed in three to four years. The project will be implemente­d by the Mumbai Internatio­nal Airport Ltd (MIAL, run by the GVK group), through a joint venture in which they will have 74 per cent. City and Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (Cidco), an agency of the state government, in charge of the project, will have the rest.

According to sources, with debt of ~10,600 crore on the books of MIAL, some members in the project monitoring committee doubted if the body would be able to raise the needed funds, a combinatio­n of equity and debt. Especially as it had not met its own target of monetising land around the Mumbai airport, with the gap having to be met through bridge loans. Their concern was that the airport project not get stuck.

MIAL is a joint venture between GVK group (50.5 per cent, held through GVK Airport Holdings), Airports Authority of India (AAI, 26 per cent), Bid Services Division (Mauritius) (13.5 per cent) and ACSA Global (10 per cent). Monetising issues MIAL has the right to develop 194 acres around Mumbai airport but has only been able to monetise 2.5 acres.

However, this year, it finalised bids for another 17 acres. “The developmen­t potential of these 17 acres is 0.34 million sq metres (3.6 mn sq ft). Bids have been won by constructi­on companies and developers like Ashoka Buildcon, Neelsiddhi, Shrem and Karmvir. The lease rent potential is ~130 per sq ft per month,” said a source.

In a May-end report, credit rating agency CRISIL said cash flow from the 17 acres’ land parcels is expected in FY18. “Future proceeds would be utilised towards repayment of securitise­d loan, as well as towards the airport project. Traction in real estate monetisati­on would be a key rating sensitivit­y factor,” it said.

Originally, MIAL had planned to generate ~1,000 crore from land leases by 2014 to fund the modernisat­ion of Mumbai airport. It could only garner ~207 crore in the form of security deposits. As a result, MIAL was forced to borrow around ~650 crore from banks. The airport’s internatio­nal terminal is to be developed into a Sky City, featuring hotels and commercial spaces. The project kicked off in 2014, with MIAL inviting bids for a few land parcels. The same year, it struck a deal with Oasis Realty to lease 5.5 acres near the internatio­nal terminal for ~580 crore in deposit and rent but the deal fell through. Optimism A GVK group spokespers­on declined comment on land monetisati­on. However, he noted, the Phase-I project cost was to be based on finalisati­on of the master plan, with funding through equity contributi­on by MIAL, Cidco and debt. “MIAL is fully confident of funding the project through its internal resources and debt,” he said. Credit rating agencies support the view that the company would be able to raise the funds. Especially after having recently restructur­ed loans of ~9,126 crore with banks, which agreed to refinancin­g the debt and extending the loan tenure. This, they say, has made the ability to service the debt much more comfortabl­e.

Under the scheme, ~6,140 crore of long-term loan, ~880 crore of fund and non-fund based working capital and an Airport Developmen­t Fund (ADF) loan of ~2,155 crore have been sanctioned by a consortium of banks, to refinance and retire the previous loans.

The tenure for the new loans is 14.5 years or 85 per cent of the tenure of the concession period and with monthly interest of 9.3 per cent. The company has pledged 74 per cent of MIAL’s shares, given an equal footing charge over the cash flows (under escrow, in which the cash surplus after statutory payments to AAI is to be maintained), as well as the first charge of the ADF escrow account. It has also pledged that any shortfall will be met by the key shareholde­rs. CRISIL CRISIL says the company is in a strong marketing position. It has seen compounded growth rate in passenger traffic of more than seven per cent (45.1 million) in 2016-17, with growth over 12 per cent in the past three years, operating at near-full utilisatio­n.

Non-aero revenues are expected to have healthy growth over the medium term, with contributi­on to total revenue increasing from 43 per cent in 2015-16 to over 60 per cent in the medium term.

All these positive factors, it has said, partially offsets the regulatory risks (aero revenues are fixed by the sector regulator) and implementa­tion risks of a new airport in Navi Mumbai. However, its debt service ability, they say, will be constraine­d by the fact that they pay 38.7 per cent revenue share to AAI.

 ??  ?? The site where the Navi Mumbai Internatio­nal Airport will come up
The site where the Navi Mumbai Internatio­nal Airport will come up

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India