Business Standard

JSW Techno buys 49% in pellets firm for ~1,000 cr

Deal via promoter firm, perhaps with eye on possible bids for assets with NCLT

- ADITI DIVEKAR & JAYAJIT DASH

JSW Group, via promoter group company JSW Techno Projects Management, has acquired a 49 per cent stake in Odishabase­d Brahmani River Pellets (BRPL) in a deal estimated at over ~1,000 crore. JSW Techno, not a listed entity, has executed an agreement with Aryan Mining and Trading Corporatio­n for acquiring stake in BRPL.

JSW Group, via promoter group company JSW Techno Projects Management, has acquired 49 per cent stake in Odisha-based Brahmani River Pellets (BRPL) in a deal estimated at over ~1,000 crore.

JSW Techno, not a listed entity, has executed an agreement with Aryan Mining and Trading Corporatio­n for acquiring stake in BRPL. Currently, JSW Techno holds 9.5 per cent stake in JSW Steel. Sources did not reveal reasons for the acquisitio­n through a promoter group company, instead of via JSW Steel, which has larger synergies with the acquired assets. BRPL makes iron ore pellets — it owns a four million tonne (mt) pellet plant, a 4.7-mt beneficiat­ion plant and a 230-km slurry pipeline connecting the two.

JSW Techno, however, is into rendering of project management services, including management consultanc­y. It advises on matters of finance, organisati­on, management, commenceme­nt or expansion, cost control and technical planning. However, it also undertakes strategic long-term investment.

JSW’s buying interest in BRPL follows a failed takeover bid by Tata Steel. In December 2016, Tata Steel had struck a deal to acquire 100 per cent equity in BRPL. The company felt the location of BRPL’s assets was strategic to its Kalinganag­ar operations and had significan­t operationa­l synergies to make the plant more competitiv­e. However, Tata Steel terminated the pact in October this year citing that the transactio­n could not be completed within the long stop date due to non-fulfilment of certain conditions set by the sellers such as obtaining necessary regulatory approvals from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), settlement of proceeding­s under Foreign Exchange Management (FEMA) Act by the Directorat­e of Enforcemen­t, and approval from the Income Tax authoritie­s.

Earlier, JSW Steel and other companies like Jindal Steel & Power Ltd (JSPL), Essar Steel, and Aditya Birla Group-owned Essel Mining & Industries Ltd had made abortive attempts to buy out BRPL to gain access to its captive iron ore mines and strategica­lly located pelletisat­ion plant at Kalinganag­ar in Odisha’s Jajpur district, home to a cluster of steel projects owned by Tata Steel, Jindal Stainless Ltd, Visa Steel, Mesco Steel and others. Three years ago, BRPL was valued at around $1 billion. But, its valuation has been falling as its captive mines have remained out of operation and due to the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the resumption of operations.

Brokerages feel the latest deal being routed through JSW Techno could be linked to the group buying another asset via the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) at a later date “If the JSW promoter manages to acquire an asset in NCLT, it would be via a joint venture (JV). Then, it makes more sense to keep this BRPL asset not linked to JSW Steel at present. Later, depending upon the outcome of the NCLT asset, decide under which business vertical it should be placed,” said a senior analyst, on condition of anonymity.

The Sajjan Jindal-led JSW Group has shown interest in NCLT-listed Bhushan Steel, Bhushan Steel & Power and Monnet Ispat. For all these three assets, Jindal is said to have expressed interest in a JV with private equity players. Of the three, Bhushan Steel and Bhushan Steel & Power are based in Odisha; Monnet has its operations in Madhya Pradesh.

An inorganic growth route to build capacity is not new for JSW Group. In JSW Energy, the company acquired two hydro power plants from Jaiprakash Power Ventures. JSW Steel has since merged Ispat Industries with itself and become geographic­ally one of the most diversifie­d steel makers in India.

With installed steel-making capacity of 18 mt annually, JSW Group has presence in Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Punjab. A stake buy in BRPL will give the group’s steel business a needed presence in the east, where it is currently present through JSW Cement at Salboni in West Bengal.

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