Business Standard

ESSAR’S INDIA REVENUE TO DIP 97%

This is combined impact of earlier divestment in Essar Oil & losing control of Essar Steel to Mittals

- KRISHNA KANT & DEV CHATTERJEE report

With Arcelormit­tal finally getting control over Essar Steel, the Essar group will see its India revenues falling by 97 per cent to just ~3,296 crore in FY19 compared to ~1.25 trillion (which was its peak) in FY14, according to filings with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. A major share of the group’s India revenues for FY14 were contribute­d by its oil refining and steel business.

With Arcelormit­tal finally getting control over Essar Steel, the Essar group will see its India revenues fall 97 per cent to just ~3,296 crore for FY19 compared to ~1.25 trillion (which was its peak) in 2014, according to filings with the ministry of corporate affairs.

A major share of the group’s India revenues for FY14 were contribute­d by its oil refining and steel business. The revenues for FY19 have been contribute­d mainly by three Indian firms — AGC Networks, Essar

Ports and Essar Shipping — filings with the ministry show.

Several firms of the group did not file annual accounts for FY19 and, hence, were not accounted for. The fall in revenues also saw a correspond­ing decline in the group’s debt, which declined to around ~3,400 crore at the end of March — excluding Essar Power and Essar Projects — from ~77,000 crore as of March 2014.

In the same period, the group firms’ combined net worth turned negative from around ~20,000 crore at the end of March 2014 to a negative ~1,650 crore at the end of March 2019.

This excludes the figures for Essar Projects and Essar Power. Both these reported losses when they last filed their audited results for FY16 and the industry situation has only worsened since then.

Essar Steel contribute­d close to ~26,000 crore to the group’s India revenues till FY18. With the successful debt resolution of Essar Steel, a further ~47,000 crore of Essar group’s debt will be resolved and not be reflected in the group’s books, said a group official.

But what the group lost in India, it made up from its overseas business with its Stanlow Refinery now generating $8.6 billion of revenues for FY19.

The group pegs its total global business revenues at $12 billion, including India’s ports, power and infrastruc­ture businesses.

Essar Steel was among the first lot of 12 companies sent for debt resolution by Indian lenders in June 2017 after the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) was enacted. Of the 12 cases, only seven have seen a successful resolution. “Indian banks will recover almost 85 per cent of their loans in the Essar Steel case compared to an average haircut of 50 per cent in rest of the cases,” said a banking source.

Over the years, the group’s businesses in India shrunk after a debt fuelled expansion into multiple sectors such as telecom, oil refining, shipping, and steel. Since 2011, the group sold several assets, including its 33 per cent stake in Vodafone Essar for $5 billion, pocketing a hefty profit. In 2017, it sold its stake in Aegis, business process outsourcin­g outfit, for $300 million and its BandraKurl­a Complex property for ~2,400 crore in April 2018.

In August 2017, the group sold its biggest revenue generator — the Jamnagar refinery and oil retail outlets — to Rosneft of Russia for $12.9 billion (~86,000 crore, including debt) and reduced group debt by half.

In January, the Essar group announced that it repaid close to ~1.37 trillion debt by selling assets, mainly to Indian lenders. Its overseas holding company, Essar Global Fund, announced that it paid ~12,000 crore debt to Indian lenders, thus extinguish­ing its entire overseas debt.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India