Khaleej Times

Tata Steel eyes India growth

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MUMBAI — Tata Steel plans to grow “very aggressive­ly” in India, riding on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promise of record infrastruc­ture spending, after moving closer to a possible joint venture in Europe that will help stem losses there.

“We will be growing very significan­tly or growing very aggressive­ly as far as India is concerned,” group executive director for finance Koushik Chatterjee said in an interview in Mumbai.

Tata Steel plans to be a key part of the government’s vision of tripling steel capacity to 300 million metric tonnes by 2030, he said.

India’s oldest steelmaker will have more bandwidth to focus on its home market after resolving UK pension liabilitie­s that have been seen as the chief roadblock to a European joint venture with Thyssenkru­pp. The company will either expand its current plants or acquire debt-laden steel mills likely to be offloaded by Indian lenders eager to pare soured loans, Chatterjee said.

The company has sought environmen­tal clearances to expand the capacity at its Jamshedpur plant to 11 million tonnes and its Kalinganag­ar to six million tonnes. However, the company would be cautious in growing faster than the market, Chatterjee said.

“We have to be balanced in the financial risk of such growth,” he said. “We don’t want to become this big when the market is still small.”

Shares of Tata Steel surged on Wednesday by the most in more than six months in Mumbai after the company and the British Steel Pension Scheme trustees agreed on key terms of a regulated apportionm­ent arrangemen­t. If the deal is approved, the company will pay a settlement of £550 million ($713 million) to the pension scheme and will sponsor a new closed pension plan, it said.

More comfortabl­e

The pension pact will make people “more comfortabl­e when they see the risks on the other side are much lower,” Chatterjee said.

“We are in deep discussion­s internally and we are also talking to counterpar­ts like Thyssen to see what is the best option.”

The Indian steelmaker has been in talks with Thyssenkru­pp and others for a joint venture in Europe since last year and Thyssenkru­pp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger had identified the pension liabilitie­s as a major stumbling block to a deal. The potential venture has also faced opposition from Germany’s largest labour union and politician­s fearing job cuts.

A deal would involve combining Tata’s plants in the Netherland­s and UK with Thyssenkru­pp’s German plants to create the region’s No.2 producer and a rival to industry leader ArcelorMit­ttal. The company’s Port Talbot operations in Wales will also be a part of the joint venture, Chatterjee said. He declined to comment on a timeline for a possible tie-up.

“The stakeholde­rs who have a stake will always have an anxiety in the absence of a full and final situation,” Chatterjee said.

“We need to do what is in the best interests of the company. We will also ensure that we take all stakeholde­rs together as we have done in the past.”

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Tata Steel CFO Koushik Chatterjee says the company ‘will be growing very aggressive­ly as far as India is concerned’. —
Bloomberg Tata Steel CFO Koushik Chatterjee says the company ‘will be growing very aggressive­ly as far as India is concerned’. —

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