Bangkok Post

Adani utility seeks funds to power India

Ability to fulfil plans will signal recovery

- ADVAIT PALEPU

As shares of Gautam Adani’s conglomera­te recover from an epic rout, the big question looming over the Indian tycoon is whether he can convince investors and lenders to back his capital-hungry businesses with fresh cash.

Few parts of Adani’s empire underscore the urgency of that funding for the billionair­e — and also for the government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi — better than Adani Transmissi­on Ltd.

India’s largest private utility is a key player in Modi’s pledge to provide power to every Indian home. In a media blitz on Monday, it touted itself as capable of “distributi­ng electricit­y to every corner of the country.”

Yet the company faces a funding gap that may force it to inject as much as $700 million by March 2026 to fulfil existing project commitment­s, according to the Indian unit of Fitch Ratings — and that’s before taking into account ambitions to expand even further in coming years.

The funding needs of infrastruc­ture builders like Adani Transmissi­on are a major factor behind the conglomera­te’s race to return to business as usual, after months of damage control and denying allegation­s of widespread corporate malfeasanc­e made by US short-seller Hindenburg Research. The stakes are also high for Modi, who faces national elections in early 2024 and has made infrastruc­ture a core plank of his nationbuil­ding agenda.

Adani Transmissi­on, which went from being a fledgling to India’s largest private utility in seven years, has grown its asset portfolio 3.6 times to 19,779 circuit kilometres (ckm) across 33 projects.

Of these, 13 projects are currently underway, but many face delays or cost overruns, including the largest one: the Warora-Kurnool Transmissi­on line that runs through three large southern Indian states.

Others have been beset by adverse weather, pandemic-era disruption­s or legal wrangles — common issues in infrastruc­tural projects in India which makes the Adani group the rare private company that has been scaling up aggressive­ly in this space. With India planning to add more than 27,000 ckm of transmissi­on lines by 2025, the company’s continued expansion will be crucial for the national goal.

‘MAINTAININ­G GROWTH’

The utility company earlier this month announced plans to raise as much as $1 billion — one of two Adani companies looking to issue new shares for the first time since the short-seller crisis, which wiped out more than $100 billion of the empire’s market value.

“Adani Transmissi­on has always been aggressive on capex so the $1 billion fundraisin­g will help them maintain growth momentum at a time when the group as a whole has had to soften their targets to come out of this logjam,” said Kranthi Bathini, director of equity strategy at WealthMill­s Securities Pvt.

“It might have to also raise additional debt to finance their capex requiremen­ts as the transmissi­on business has high working capital needs,” he said.

Capital infusion required by March 2026 from the company in its ongoing projects has surged as much as 60% to 57.95 billion rupees ($700 million) compared to what was envisaged before, India Ratings and Research, the local unit of Fitch Rating’s, said in a March 30 statement. This is due to cost overruns or the borrowings not being enough to support the projects, forcing the utility firm to invest more.

India Ratings revised its outlook on Adani Transmissi­on to “negative” to reflect this uncertaint­y around debt funding secured for the under-constructi­on transmissi­on lines. Any shortfall will require the company to invest more “to meet project completion deadlines, potentiall­y creating cashflow mismatches over FY24,” it said.

An Adani Group spokespers­on said in an email that the conglomera­te does “not comment on routine business matters.” “All public disclosure­s on business matters are disclosed when appropriat­e,” the spokespers­on said in response to queries on how Adani Transmissi­on plans to plug the funding gap.

‘BEST POSSIBLE ASSETS’

Some high-profile investors are convinced about the large role units like Adani Transmissi­on play in the country’s developmen­t.

GQG Partners’s Chief Investment Officer Rajiv Jain, one of the first investors to show support for the conglomera­te after the Hindenburg attack, told Bloomberg last week that GQG had raised its investment in the Adani empire and its holdings were now worth $3.5 billion.

Jain said he is willing to buy into the group’s new share sale because “these are the best possible infrastruc­ture assets available in India.” Praising the conglomera­te for its “quality of execution,” Jain said, “Who else in India is creating such quality infrastruc­ture assets at this scale?”

Very few private sector firms in India have Adani’s risk appetite and ability to withstand the vagaries of infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the sprawling, unwieldy country.

Infrastruc­ture projects are funded by a mix of debt and capital infusion, or equity, from the company. Delays, pricier inputs or legal challenges also push up project costs.

Its largest project by length, WaroraKurn­ool Transmissi­on line, or WKTL, is facing a cost-overrun worth 6.7 billion rupees due to higher input and execution costs, India Ratings said at the end of March.

The company “management confirmed that it will fully support the project to fund the entire cost-overrun,” it said in the statement.

Another project — Adani Electricit­y Mumbai Infra Ltd or AEMIL — was slow to start as the Tata Group mounted a yearlong legal challenge against Adani’s license.

Eight Adani transmissi­on lines are expected to be operationa­l by March 2024 after some delay, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from company presentati­ons and government websites.

FAVOURABLE ORDERS

The Adani Group’s effort to revert to pre-Hindenburg growth is gaining momentum from recent developmen­ts.

Besides being given a reprieve earlier this month by a Supreme Court panel that found no evidence of regulatory failure or market manipulati­on so far in the episode, Adani Transmissi­on has also won favourable regulatory orders to raise electricit­y tariffs in its operating projects to recoup past revenue shortfalls.

It’s another example of the company’s ability to navigate the difficulti­es of infrastruc­ture building in India, as utilities generally cannot recoup higher costs incurred during project execution from end users as electricit­y tariffs are fixed through auctions. They need to petition the central or state regulator to approve higher tariffs, which usually involves a lengthy legal process.

The utility’s closely held subsidiary, Adani Electricit­y Mumbai Ltd, got a favourable order at the end of March from the state power regulator that allowed it to raise tariffs charged to consumers by 2.2% in fiscal year 2024 and by 2.1% in 2025.

It reported an 85% jump in profit to 4.4 billion rupees for the quarter ended March 31, boosted partly by a one-time income from favourable regulatory orders. Revenue rose 17% to 30.31 billion rupees, the company said in a statement to exchanges late Monday night.

Neverthele­ss, many investors are still waiting to see if the unit can find the funding it needs before buying back into the stock. Its shares, which are down 69% this year, have been one of the slowest to recover from the Hindenburg rout among the group’s listed entities. The stock slipped as much as 4.8% yesterday, ahead of its exclusion from MSCI India Index that takes effect today.

“For new buying to take place, there needs be a new investor,” said Deven Choksey, chief executive officer at local brokerage KR Choksey Shares & Securities. “We will have to wait for the proposed equity fundraise to conclude to see an appreciati­on of the stock.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Adani Power Ltd’s thermal power plant in Mundra, Gujarat, India.
BLOOMBERG Adani Power Ltd’s thermal power plant in Mundra, Gujarat, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand