Khaleej Times

India okays plan to create state oil giant

- Debjit Chakrabort­y, Saket Sundria and Abhijit Roy Chowdhury

new delhi — India approved the sale of a stake in state-run refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corp to the country’s biggest oil and gas explorer, according to a person with knowledge of the decision.

The move fulfils a plan, first outlined in February, to create an Indian oil giant through consolidat­ion and mergers, forming a company comparable with internatio­nal rivals that could weather crude-price volatility. Bringing HPCL into its fold will make Oil & Natural Gas Corp the nation’s No. 3 refiner after Indian Oil Corp and Reliance Industries Ltd. The stake is valued at about 299 billion rupees ($4.6 billion), based on Wednesday’s closing stock price.

“This deal will make both ONGC and HPCL stronger as the benefits of synergy are huge,” ONGC Chairman Dinesh Kumar Sarraf said in a phone interview on Wednesday. “It will add value to shareholde­rs of both companies.”

The cabinet backed the plan to sell the government’s 51.1 per cent holding in HPCL to ONGC, the person told reporters, asking not to be identified because the informatio­n isn’t public. The deal value is more than 40 per cent of the 725 billion-rupee target of India’s asset-disposal plan for the fiscal year to March 2018. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion received 462.47 billion rupees from divestment­s last fiscal year, exceeding its goal.

The HPCL stake sale is unlikely to trigger an open offer as the gov- ernment’s holding is being transferre­d to another state-run firm. Under India’s takeover code, if a company acquires more than 25 per cent of another listed entity, it has to make an open offer to buy at least 26 per cent more.

The immediate reaction of these developmen­ts could be negative for HPCL, especially if its minority shareholde­rs aren’t given an open offer, Citi Research analysts Saurabh Handa and Sohini Banerjee said in a report Thursday. For ONGC, acquiring a downstream asset like HPCL should be positive for its business mix, they said.

HPCL shares fell as much as 5.2 per cent in Mumbai, the most in a month, to 363.80 rupees and traded at 373.60 rupees as of 11.13am. ONGC shares gained nearly three per cent to 167.85 rupees.

ONGC is running low on funds as it has raised spending amid a decline in costs for exploratio­n services and equipment. The acquisitio­n may threaten some of its near-term investment­s including a plan to revive a long-delayed project aimed at cutting the nation’s energy imports.

Apart from a proposed $4.5 billion investment in its oil and gas blocks this financial year, ONGC plans to spend a further $1.2 billion to acquire Gujarat State Petroleum Corp’s stake in a block off India’s east coast.

 ?? — AFP ?? ONGC plans to spend a further $1.2 billion to acquire Gujarat State Petroleum Corp’s stake in a block off India’s east coast.
— AFP ONGC plans to spend a further $1.2 billion to acquire Gujarat State Petroleum Corp’s stake in a block off India’s east coast.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates