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Vedanta’s demerger is a clean one, but leaves some questions unanswered

The demerger will see individual businesses find their true market value but how debt will be apportioned and how it will address the promoters’ debt challenge is unclear.

October 03, 2023 / 08:40 IST
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Vedanta's demerger

On a day that the listed Vedanta announced its much-awaited demerger, S&P Global Ratings downgraded parent company Vedanta Resources’ rating due to a potential bond extension exercise. This is the backdrop in which Vedanta’s demerger exercise is taking place but how exactly it will improve the parent’s funding profile is not clear as yet. The exercise itself is expected to take 12-15 months and $2 billion worth of Vedanta Resources’ loans is maturing in two tranches in 2024.

What has Vedanta proposed? It will demerge five operating businesses—aluminium, oil and gas, base metals (mainly copper and zinc international), ferrous (steel and iron ore mining) and power. The sixth company will be Vedanta itself, which will continue to hold the Hindustan Zinc (HZL) stake and will also fund investments in new sectors such as semi-conductors and display.

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Vedanta will, therefore, remain as a holding company. Once the government disposes its stake in HZL, another round of consolidation could take place depending on whether Vedanta is the buyer or not. Vedanta’s current market capitalisation is at Rs 82707 crore while its 65 percent stake in Hindustan Zinc alone is valued at Rs 84660 crore. Apart from a holding company discount, sizeable debt on the books, promoters’ debt woes and challenges in certain businesses could be pulling down its valuation. Thus, post-demerger it may actually benefit by having a leaner balance sheet, subject to the capex commitments for capital-hungry businesses such as semiconductors.

Among the demerged businesses, the largest by revenue and also in a relatively strong position is aluminium (see chart). The metal has a bright long-term demand outlook and Vedanta’s plans to increase capacity and proportion of value-added products should see it continue to be a significant contributor. The oil & gas business is a sizeable contributor to Vedanta’s consolidated EBITDA but faces challenges in increasing its output and that could be a concern for investors.