Mint Bangalore

Vedanta’s debt split post-demerger worries banks

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According to the second banker, if the resultant debt after the split is in a company housing a business that did not perform well in the past quarters, lenders would be displeased.

Meanwhile, senior executives from Vedanta recently met some bankers to discuss the proposed split and to assuage concerns regarding the proposal, the second banker said.

In a note on 19 January, ratings company Crisil had raised similar doubts. Vedanta currently has a Crisil credit rating of AA-, and is on rating watch with developing implicatio­ns.

As of 31 December, Vedanta’s standalone gross debt stood at ₹44,134 crore, and after accounting for cash and cash equivalent­s of ₹1,052 crore, its net debt was at ₹43,082 crore.

Besides State Bank, Vedanta’s other lenders include Bank of Baroda (BoB), Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and IDBI Bank.

Crisil said that clarity on allocation of assets and liabilitie­s across entities under the proposed structure, along with group/parent support philosophy for each entity, was yet to emerge.

This, it said, will be critical for evaluating the credit profiles of the entities, including Vedanta, under the proposed structure, and for the resolution of the rating watch.

In November, Crisil had downgraded Vedanta’s ratings citing an increased possibilit­y of Vedanta’s consolidat­ed financial leverage, or the ratio of net debt to earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on (Ebitda) for FY24 remaining higher than the rating threshold of 2.7 times.

“This is because successful completion of the company’s plans to deleverage the balance-sheet through the inorganic route of asset monetizati­on is expected to fall behind the earlier expected timelines,” the rating agency said in November.

Emails sent to Vedanta, SBI, and

SBI Caps remained unanswered till press time.

Others said it would not be smooth sailing for Vedanta. According to analysts at financial research firm CreditSigh­ts, the demerger could face major hurdles from Vedanta’s minority shareholde­rs or creditors, potentiall­y derailing the deal.

“While we acknowledg­e the demerger could improve Vedanta Ltd’s overall equity fund-raising ability and valuations and simplifies price discovery, we are cognizant that cash leakage via dividend upstreamin­g is still unchanged,” the Fitch group company said in a note on 13 March.

Mint reported in July that local banks had turned cautious on their exposures to Vedanta, worried that chunky dividend payments to ease the parent’s debt burden might stress the local balance sheet. Vedanta Resources holds a 63.71% stake in Vedanta Ltd, which, in turn, owns 64.9% in Hindustan Zinc Ltd. The government owns 29.54% in Hindustan Zinc.

The demerger may face hurdles from Vedanta’s minority shareholde­rs, potentiall­y derailing the deal

 ?? REUTERS ?? Crisil has said clarity on the allocation of assets and liabilitie­s across Vedanta entities post demerger was yet to emerge
REUTERS Crisil has said clarity on the allocation of assets and liabilitie­s across Vedanta entities post demerger was yet to emerge

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