Business Standard

JSW AHEAD, BIDS ~130 BN FOR BHUSHAN POWER

- VEENA MANI & DEV CHATTERJEE

JSW Steel and Tata Steel bid for debt-laden Bhushan Power & Steel on the final day for submission of bids. According to sources close to the developmen­t, JSW Steel is ahead in the race with an offer of ~130 billion, while Tata Steel offered

~115 billion. The bids will be placed before a legal team, after which SBI Caps will evaluate the financial plans and finally it will be placed before the committee of creditors. The process could be over by February 16, sources close to the developmen­t said. Around 13 firms had submitted expression­s of interest. Some did not qualify and only five were given access to the virtual data room. The liquidatio­n value is estimated to be around ~90 billion, while the fair value is estimated to be vastly different at ~250 billion, sources said. VeenaMani& DevChatter­jee write

JSW Steel and Tata Steel bid for debt-laden Bhushan Power & Steel on the final day for submission of bids.

According to sources close to the developmen­t, JSW Steel is ahead in the race with an offer of ~130 billion and Tata Steel ~115 billion. The bids will be placed before a legal team, after which SBI Caps will evaluate the financial plans and place it before the committee of creditors. The process could be over by February 16, sources close to the developmen­t said.

Around 13 companies had submitted expression­s of interest. Some did not qualify and only five were provided access to the virtual data room.

The liquidatio­n value for Bhushan Power was estimated to be around ~90 billion, while the fair value was estimated to be vastly different at ~250 billion, sources said.

Bhushan Power is one of the few companies where lenders had pressed for a fair value much before the insolvency regulator made it mandatory. The committee of creditors is likely to be guided by an average of the liquidatio­n value and the fair value.

The company’s debt in FY16 stood at ~372 billion, net sales were at ~77 billion and losses were at ~24.36 billion. The dues, however, have ballooned to ~470 billion now.

Apart from JSW and Tata Steel, Anil Agarwal’s Vedanta had conducted due diligence of the plant. However, it stayed away from submitting a bid, much as it refrained from making a bid for Bhushan Steel.

AION Capital was also understood to have shown interest but didn’t submit a bid. Earlier in the day, a Dubai-based investor, who had submitted an expression of interest, withdrew from the process.

ArcelorMit­tal withdrew last month without citing reasons. Promoter Sanjay Singal had also submitted an expression of interest. However, Singal changed plans after the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was amended, debarring promoters from bidding without clearing overdues.

Bhushan Power ran into trouble after its licenses for iron ore and coal mines were cancelled. It was allotted a coal mine with reserves of around 250 million tonnes, but this was deallocate­d in 2014. The iron ore mines were committed by the Odisha government. Two mines were allocated in 2012 and 2014 after interventi­on of the Supreme Court. Subsequent­ly, the amended Mines and Minerals (Developmen­t and Regulation) Act was passed in 2015, and the company’s iron ore mines were cancelled. The unlisted company has steelmakin­g capacity of 3 million tonnes across Odisha, West Bengal, and Chandigarh.

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