Vedanta seeks shareholders nod for delisting; e-voting till Jun 24


PTI | New Delhi | Updated: 26-05-2020 16:46 IST | Created: 26-05-2020 16:46 IST
Vedanta seeks shareholders nod for delisting; e-voting till Jun 24
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Billionaire Anil Agarwal-controlled Vedanta Ltd on Tuesday began the process of seeking shareholders nod for delisting the company. The firm through a postal ballot sought shareholders nod to delist after Agarwal's Vedanta Resources Ltd offered to buyout about 49.9 per cent of public shareholding at a price of Rs 87.5 per share, it said in a regulatory filing.

The proposal needs to be approved by at least 66.7 per cent of minority shareholders. Post shareholder approval, the company will file for a reverse book-building process with the stock exchanges. In reverse book-building, shareholders bid at which price they would be willing to sell their shares. At the end of the reverse book-building process, all the quotes are aggregated and a final price, also known as the 'discovered price' is announced.

The company board will have to accept or reject the discovered price within 5 working days from the closure of the book-building exercise. If the discovered price is not acceptable to the board/acquirer, it can announce a counter-offer, which will be higher than the price offered initially.

For the delisting process to be successful, the promoter's stake in the company will have to go up to 90 per cent. If the promoter fails to increase his stake to 90 per cent, the company cannot delist. The offer price of Rs 87.50 per share, which is less than half the 52-week high of Rs 180 and just above the 52-week low of Rs 60, is lower than Vedanta's Tuesday closing price of Rs 88 on the BSE. It has been criticised by Institutional Investor Advisory Services (IIAS) as "opportunist".

In a regulatory filing to the stock exchanges, Vedanta said shareholders can cast their votes between May 26 and June 24. "Once the vote on the resolution is cast by a member, he or she will not be allowed to change it subsequently," it said.

Vedanta Resources Ltd (VRL), which owns 50.1 per cent of Vedanta Ltd, has offered to acquire all of the balance 49.9 per cent shareholding held by the public and delist the company from the BSE. On May 18, Agarwal-chaired board of directors of Vedanta Ltd approved its parent, VRL's open offer.

The last privatisation of a company in the energy space happened in 2015 when Essar Oil was delisted. While the floor price for the buyback was set at Rs 146.05 per share, the promoters agreed to pay Rs 262.80 per share - a premium of 80 per cent. In all Rs 3,064 crore was paid to the shareholders and the company delisted from stock exchanges. In August 2017, the promoters paid former minority shareholders of Essar Oil an additional amount of Rs 75.48 per share, totalling to Rs 880 crore. The additional payout was based on the price at which Russia's Rosneft and its partners had agreed to acquire Essar Oil.

This was the first instance where public shareholders were rewarded even after tendering their shares in a delisting company. Giving reasons for the delisting, Vedanta had previously stated that it will simplify the group structure.

Moody's Investors Service had on May 19 said that taking Vedanta Ltd private will give promoters access to cash surpluses in the firm's oil and gas business unit. "If successful, the transaction will provide VRL better access to future cash surpluses and cash of around USD 1.4 billion held at Vedanta Ltd and its wholly-owned subsidiary, Cairn India Holdings Ltd, at December 2019. Additionally, VRL's higher shareholding in Vedanta Ltd will substantially reduce cash leakage, while extracting dividends from step-down subsidiary Hindustan Zinc Ltd, which held cash of USD 3 billion at December 2019," it had said.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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