Wednesday 4 May 2016

Government raises Rs 8,152 crore via NTPC bonus debenture sale to EPFO

NEW DELHI: The government raised Rs 8,152 crore in 2015-16 by selling bonus debentures of NTPC to EPFO, Parliament was informed today. 

Disinvestment in central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) is undertaken as per the extant disinvestment policy of the government, Minister of State for Finance Jayant Sinha said in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha today. 

He said the government raised as much as Rs 23,997.29 crore in 2015-16 by diluting its stake in various CPSEs. 

"Further, the government has raised Rs 8,152 crore on account of sale of bonus debentures of NTPC to EPFO," Sinha said in the reply. 

Besides, an additional amount of Rs 1,023 crore (approximately) was realised as buyback tax on account of buyback transactions undertaken by unlisted CPSEs during 2015-16, he added. 


Buyback helps a company reduce equity by using idle cash and hence, provide better returns to shareholders. 

The Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) has helped the exchequer garner Rs 4,500 crore through buyback of shares by Hindustan Aeronautics and Bharat Dynamics in March. 

In the Budget 2016-17, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the government will leverage the assets of CPSEs for generation of resources for investment in new projects. 

The NITI Aayog will identify the CPSEs for strategic sale. 

"We will encourage CPSEs to divest individual assets like land, manufacturing units, etc to release their asset value for making investment in new projects," Jaitley had said.

MTR Foods to invest Rs 200 crore in 3-5 years to scale up

MTR Foods on Tuesday said it will invest about Rs 200 crore in the next three to five years to scale up its manufacturing infrastructure.
The company also announced the opening of its new e-commerce platform, which will give consumers access to its entire range of products.

"Another big thing that we are doing is around operations and manufacturing, which is really in preparation for the future. If we have to grow... we will need additional capacity, we will need additional investment," MTR Foods CEO Sanjay Sharma told reporters here.
"We have put together a plan internally, based on our growth plans, to invest close to about Rs 200 crore in the next three to five years.
"This will be on increasing our capacity from close to about 45,000 tonnes to about 72,000 tonnes with state-of-the- art equipment and high quality infrastructure," he said.
In 2007, Norwegian conglomerate Orkla took over MTR Foods, which has been serving authentic Indian food for about 90 years.
Stating that MTR's capacity was about 18-20,000 tonnes when Orkla took over, Sharma said since then "we have doubled it."
"We have invested close to about Rs 220 crore just in capital investment and improving the standards of the factory, and took the capacity to about 45,000 tonnes," he added.
The company has a facility at Bommasandra in the city.
MTR today has a size of about Rs 700 crore with a compounded annual growth rate of 18 per cent. It has over 140 products.
"We have very high expectations out of MTR, we expect touching close to Rs 2,000 crore as we go ahead into 2020," he said.
Pointing out that MTR has retained number one position in all categories it serves, the company officials said exports form about 10 per cent of the business.

KPMG's offshore arm in India appoints Sameer Chadha as CEO

NEW DELHI: KPMG's offshore arm in India has appointed Sameer Chadha as its Partner and CEO.



Chadha joins KPMG Global Services (KGS) from Barclays Shared Services, where he was the Chief Executive Officer.

"KGS is integral to KPMG Global as well as the India strategy and we are confident that with Sameer's leadership, KGS will progress to the next level of growth and expansion," Richard Rekhy, CEO, KPMG in India, said.

Chadha has 25 years of experience with leading organisations across the financial services and consumer goods sectors. Prior to working with Barclays, he held strategic leadership roles at firms such as Bank of America, First Source Solutions and Lehman Brothers.

He is a chartered accountant and holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the Shri Ram College of Commerce, Delhi University.

BGR Energy rallies on settlement agreement with Hitachi, Japan

BGR Energy Systems has rallied 17% to Rs 124 on the BSE in early morning trade after the company announced that it has executed agreement with HitachiJapan and Hitachi Power Europe GmbH (HPE), Germany to settle their disputes.


“The agreement provides for certain payments to be made by HTC to the company in a phased manner over a period of time on achievement of number of milestones/events/transactions so as to realise the objectives mentioned hereinabove,” BGR Energy said in a press release.

The agreement has come into effect and has become legally binding with effect from 29th April, 2016 upon fulfillment of the conditions mentioned therein.

The agreement, inter alia, provides for, execution of NTPC contracts for Solapur (2 x 660 MW) and Meja (2 x 660 MW) of Supercritical Steam Generators (Boilers) and Lara (2 x 800 MW) Supercritical Steam Turbines and Generators (STG) (collectively referred to as "NTPC Projects") and for certain arrangement with respect to the future of the joint venture (JV) relationship between HTC, HPE and the Company in respect of the existing Joint Venture companies viz., BGR Boilers Private Limited and BGR Turbines Company Private Limited after completion of the NTPC Projects in compliance of the NTPC contract and other related conditions.

These JV companies were formed in the year 2010 for technical and financial collaboration for manufacture of super critical boilers and steam turbines and generators.

The company said, in fulfillment of the conditions of the Agreement, the Company has filed relevant applications for withdrawal of all pending litigation and other legal proceedings filed against HTC, HPE, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Limited, Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems Ltd. and Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems Europe GmbH.

At 09:49 am, the stock was up 15% at Rs 122 on the BSE. A combined 1.71 million shares changed hands so far against an average sub 200,000 shares that were traded daily in past two weeks on the BSE and NSE.

ICICI Prudential invests Rs 150 crore in Signature Global

NEW DELHI: ICICI Prudential's real estate fund has invested Rs 150 crore in realty firm Signature Global for the development of ongoing and future affordable housing projects. 

Signature Global, one of the key stakeholder of financial investment firm SMC Group, is developing four housing projects comprising of 4,500 dwelling units in Gurgaon under the Haryana government's affordable housing policy.

The company will launch its fifth affordable housing project tomorrow, which has about 730 units, at Gurgaon in a price range Rs 16-22 lakh. 

"We have raised Rs 150 crore from ICICI Prudential's real estate fund. The amount has been raised in debt form at group level," Signature Global Chairman and Co-Founder Pradeep Aggarwal told PTI. 

"The fund will be used for the development of our current five affordable housing projects and also to acquire new projects," he added. 

KPMG India acted as the financial advisor to Signature Global for the transaction. 

Aggarwal said the company is exploring opportunities for affordable housing projects in Maharashtra, Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh besides Haryana. 

Signature global is looking to add 7-8 new projects this fiscal, he added. 

"We have got good response for all 4 projects which have been launched so far, with each of them getting oversubscribed by almost 3-4 times at the time of launch," he said. 

The construction work on all the four projects have commenced and the same would be completed in the scheduled four years time. 

Aggarwal said although the margins are less in affordable housing projects, the sales volumes are higher.

The Saudis may know something about oil the rest of us don’t

Investors may be salivating for a piece of Saudi Aramco when the kingdom of Saudi Arabia sells a small chunk of its gigantic state-owned oil company, probably in 2017. But potential buyers ought to beware.


Oil producers have already endured an enormous shock during the last two years, with the benchmark price for Brent crude plunging from $115 a barrel in 2014 to about $30 earlier this year, and now rising back to around $45. The oil bust has caused severe stress for oil producers such as Russia and Venezuela, and caused Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil producer, to rethink its priorities.“I think they’re hedging the uncertainty that their oil is going to be worth less,” Matthew Weatherly-White, founder of the Caprock Group, tells me in the video above. “Even more dramatically, there might be stranded carbon assets they own, and by that I mean assets that are simply worth nothing.”
The Saudis plan to offer about 5% of the shares in Aramco to the public as a way to raise cash they can invest in other things, to diversify their oil-dependent economy. That gives Aramco an implied value of $2 trillion or so, which would be six times the market value of Exxon Mobil (XOM) and make Aramco the world’s largest oil company, by far.
But oil may face challenges a lot worse than the weak demand, oversupply and plunging prices of the last two years. A historic agreement made last December among 196 different countries, known as COP21, could bring strict new rules on the use of oil and other fossil fuels in many nations, essentially making it more expensive and encouraging other forms of energy use. At the same time, carbon alternatives such as solar and wind power and electric vehicles are getting cheaper and more widespread.
The two trends combined could spell a gradual end for oil and a long-term decline in the Saudis’ most valuable asset. “I think what the Saudis are doing is looking at the uncertainty in the future of oil and saying, ‘we’ve got this $2 trillion asset we’re sitting on. It’s possible it might be worth less in the future because of the stroke of a regulator’s pen, or because the market deems it to be less than it is right now’,” Weatherley-White says.
There have been many extreme predictions relating to oil, from the “peak oil” theory that goes back decades to the bottomless oil some analysts now think producers can churn out indefinitely, on account of fracking and other new technology. If there's one constant, it's that forecasters tend to be terrible at predicting what will happen to the price and suppy of oil.
So it might be shrewder to consider a range of scenarios that could explain the Saudis’ willingness to sell a stake in Aramco. Weatherley-White sees three: The Saudis might simply be making a modest effort to diversify and become less dependent on oil, which would be smart. Or they could be sitting on considerably less oil than the public thinks, and looking to sell while the rest of the world thinks the emperor is still wearing clothes. Or, finally, the Saudis may be running short of cash due to expensive wars with bordering states and the costly lifestyles of its royals, and looking to bolster its reserves, without explictly saying so.
If the Saudis are basically betting against the future of oil, it would probably be shrewd for ordinary investors to follow the lead and assess the vulnerability of their own portfolios. “Look at the businesses that might have some climate risk embedded in them,” Weatherley-White advises. That includes more than just energy firms. Insurers, for instance, might be exposed to rising claims caused by higher sea levels and more violent weather caused by climate change. Transportation companies might have to alter routes and incur extra costs to avoid low-lying or stormy areas. And agriculture may shift further north, as once-frigid areas warm, becoming more suitable for crops. Who knows, even the Saudis might get into farming.

Tuesday 3 May 2016

Kishore Biyani steps down as Managing Director of Future Retail

MUMBAI: Future Group Chairman Kishore Biyani has stepped down as managing director of Future Retail as part of its restructuring with Bharti Retail that it acquired a year ago. 

As per the deal announced in May last year, both the companies had proposed a demerger of the retail business of Future Retail to Bharti Retail and separation of the infrastructure business of Bharti Retail into Future Retail. 

Future Group will have two entities — one that will own all retail formats, including Big Bazaar, Easy-Day, eZone and HomeTown under Future Retail which is already listed, and Future Enterprises that will house all the backend operations, logitics business and non-core assets. 

Biyani would continue to hold office as a non-executive director of Future Retail, the company said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange. 

Under the deal annonced in May last year, the Future Group agreed to merge its retail business with Bharti Retail in a Rs 750 crore all-stock deal to create one of the biggest supermarket chains, with a Rs 15,000 crore turnover. Bharti Retail will get 9% each in both these companies and will also hold ordinary convertible debentures worth Rs 250 crore.

Sun Capital

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