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Billionaire Agarwal Weighs Vedanta Merger With India Unit

The tycoon has held preliminary discussions with prospective advisers about combining his Vedanta Resources with Vedanta.

Billionaire Agarwal Weighs Vedanta Merger With India Unit
Anil Agarwal of Vedanta Resources looks on during a panel discussion in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg)

Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal is considering a potential merger of his commodity empire’s indebted holding company with cash-rich listed unit Vedanta Ltd., people familiar with the matter said. 

The tycoon has held preliminary discussions with prospective advisers about the idea of combining his closely-held Vedanta Resources Ltd. with Mumbai-traded Vedanta Ltd., the people said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential information. 

The potential deal follows a global commodities boom that’s fueled a rally in Vedanta Ltd. shares and almost doubled its market capitalization in the past year to about $17 billion. Deliberations are still at an early stage, and there’s no certainty Agarwal will decide to pursue a transaction, the people said. 

Billionaire Agarwal Weighs Vedanta Merger With India Unit

Agarwal didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A representative for Vedanta said there is “no plan” to merge Vedanta Resources with Vedanta Ltd.

Vedanta Resources has already been raising its stake in its unit through an open offer and share purchases from the market after a failed takeover attempt. As of December it owned almost 70% of Vedanta Ltd., up from about 50% in October 2020. It had about $11.4 billion of net debt as of Sept. 30, according to a corporate presentation.

“Vedanta Resources is debt heavy and shareholders may be irked by any merger move and their initial reaction will be negative,” said Prashanth Kumar, an analyst at Dolat Capital Market Pvt. in Mumbai. “But high debt may not be bad in the medium to long term given the high commodity prices and low interest costs. One will need to see the full contours of a possible deal, if at all there is one.” 

Shares of Vedanta Ltd. fell as much as 4.1% earlier on Thursday in Mumbai before reversing those losses. They were up 1.6% as of 11:18 a.m. local time.

Vedanta Resources was the first Indian business to list in London back in 2003, before Agarwal, 68, took it private 15 years later when his Volcan Investments Ltd. bought out minority investors as part of efforts to streamline the group’s structure. Vedanta Resources also owns a 79.4% stake in Zambia’s Konkola Copper Mines, which has been under provisional liquidation since May 2019 and the matter is still the subject of court cases and arbitration proceedings.

Vedanta Ltd. said in December that it intends to unlock value with options including separately listing its aluminum, iron and steel and oil and gas businesses. The board has formed a panel to evaluate the plan, it said in a filing. The Press Trust of India reported last week that the company will outline details by end-March.

Subsidiaries of Vedanta Ltd. include Hindustan Zinc Ltd., Bharat Aluminium Co., Talwandi Sabo Power Ltd. and Electrosteels Steel Ltd., according to the corporate presentation. In December, Hindustan Zinc said it would pay $1 billion as interim dividend.

Vedanta Ltd. had cash and equivalents of about 252 billion rupees ($3.4 billion) as of Dec. 31, according to company filings. Profit surged more than fivefold to 46.2 billion rupees in the three months through September, followed by a 26% year-on-year increase in the quarter ended December. 

Agarwal, a former scrap metals trader, rose to become a commodities magnate through a series of ambitious acquisitions. He has a net worth of about $3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

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