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ADC Business 17 AFTERNOON DESPATCH & COURIER WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2009 RIL-RPL merger holds promise on all fronts A s said by Alok Agaral, CFO, Reliance, the RIL- RPL merger “is all about cre- ating a larger or integrated energy major, it gives us the ability to take on projects much larger than done be- fore.”. Other than the size, the merger gives Reliance a huge elbow room to scale its opera- tion according to demand and fine-tune its plans of how much of each project to make . As for as country’s needs are concerned, RIL can fuel India for 5 to six months making it less dependent on imports. The merger is a move that will create the world’s com- plex to convert crude oil in pe- troleum products at a single location. The company said on Monday, that it would offer one share for every 16 shares held by investors in Reliance Petroleum Ltd (RPL), its refin- ing subsidiary. RIL will issue 69.2 million new shares to RPL sharehold- ers, increasing the equity cap- ital by 4 per cent to Rs. 1,643 crore. RIL’s own 70 per cent share holding in RPL will be extinguished. The company says the merger will increase the earning per share in the combined entity “I cannot think of a better time for the merger. RIL share- holders will benefit from bringing in an asset that is complete now and has mini- mal project risk ( the RPL re- finery) and RPL shareholders , by being part of the parent company, can again form (the) latter’s gas and oil port- folio, and can get all the bene- fits from KG Dt6 (Krishna-Godavari) gas fields) which is so closed to produc- tion,” Agarwal told reporters after announcing the merger m deal on Monday. The counted synergies in crude procurement, product placement, supply chin opti- mization and greater opera- tional flexibility as big merger gains , besides efficient utilization of combined cash flows” and higher valua- tion of for the merged entity.. Though a few analysts were surprised by the timing of what they said was an ex- pected move, most said merger made strategic tech- nical and financial strength for RIL.. Goldman Sachs ana- lysts said on Monday the deal will be strategically positive for RIL as it would give the company access to about $ 1.5 to $ 1.8 billion of RPL’s an- nual cash flow (on full ramp- up for its various planned projects)” and “Chevron’s concomitant exit from RPL (at Rs 60 per share) adds margin- ally to RIL’s valuation and also gives RIL’s promoters full con- trol and of the future direction of the company.” US energy firm Chevron Corp. decided on Friday to sell its 5 per cent stake in RPL for $ 260 million at current ex- change rates’. Another favourable point of the merger worth mentioning is that there is no tax or depreciation benefit from merger that was largely to boost RIL revenues – a fact that Agarwal confirmed in the press briefing. “The merger is not for tax saving. The merged entity will be tax-neutral and we do not see any impact. of additional depreciation. The rating agencies on their part reaffirmed their ratings for RIL debt after the merger was announced. The relative importance of RIL in all the stock indices will rise after the completion of merger with Reliance Petro- leum. This is because all the indices are based upon the market . capitalization of its constituents and post-merger, with RPL shareholders getting RIL stocks, the market capital- ization of RIL will rise.. It is a technical positive for RIL since its weightage in the bench- mark indices is likely to go up,” said a Goldman Sachs re- port. Commenting upon the treasury losses RIL that RIL is rumoured to have incurred in its futures contracts, Agarwal said” “We had bought oil at $ 10 a barrel in 1999 and $ 125 in 2008 and still consistently maintained higher gross refin- ery margins than industry benchmarks. We would jot have got there if we do not know how to manage the volatility in risks..” BY MANIK K. MALAKAR M UMBAI : Rupert Pennant- Rea a former Deputy Gov- ernor of the Bank of England once quipped, “At the Bank of England we have the abil- ity to mess things up, and our record shows that we have often used it.” That is a sentiment which com- panies that went in for the merg- ers and acquisitions (M&A) during 2005-2008 must be richly sharing. The bull market of that period made quite a few companies go in for M&A activity. They may yet be living to regret their decision. A MTM (mark to market) report indicates that M&A activity has lost a whooping 53 per cent of their value. This information was compiled by Jagannadham Thunuguntla, who is the CEO of SMC Capitals, one of India’s lead- ing financial services companies. Indian companies in the period 2005-2008 took part in M&A activ- ity worth $ 45 billion dollars (of listed Indian companies and a deal size of more than $100 million). This value is now down to $ 20.96 billion This represents a loss in value of a staggering $ 24.04 bil- lion. Obviously not a small amount! “Companies usually ventured into the M&A route either for busi- ness compatibility, R&D, access to raw materials, access to cus- tomers, new product line, and other factors,” said Thunuguntla, when asked about the rationale behind the M&A activity. The bull run of the period start- ing from 2004 was also a factor in boosting M&A activity since In- dian businesses had large profits and accumulated reserves. “The vaunted ‘Indian Growth Story’ campaign was yet another factor that led to some of India’s business houses venture into big ticket M&As,” continued Thunuguntla. The additional global attention that these deals bring to the companies and their promoters was another catalyst. M&A activity was both domestic as well as foreign. On current valu- ations, domestic MTM transac- tions have lost 42 to 43 per cent while overseas ventures lost 60 per cent. The cumulative loss averages out to 53 per cent. A lack of hard-nosed valuations in the M&A was a distinct feature. “An interesting point is that most of these over-excited M&A were done by seasoned, matured busi- ness houses rather than the young, first-generation entrepreneurs,” reports Thunuguntla. This under- lines the point that even seasoned businessmen get influenced with ‘false promises’ of bull market. Continuing with this evaluation of M&A valuations, it is to be noted that M&A activity of 2005 has per- formed (relatively) better than that of 2006-2008. “This probably be- cause by the time of 2005, the in- fluence of bull markets is not in full swing and the acquirers were not paying hyper-valuations,” ex- plains Thunuguntla. “However, in the euphoric mindset, the Indian corporates had bitten the cross-border M&A bug and they are now paying a heavy price,” he said. Cash-rich conservative groups have now ex- hausted all their profits, their over- seas acquisitions have failed to deliver expected results and they are starving for cash now. In the later years, however, the feeling of euphoria came into play and acquirers were not both- ered about how much they are paying. “Most of the transactions of 2006, 2007 were out of adrena- line-rush than out of rationality,” he said. The only sector in the M&A space that has proved to be an ex- ception to the rule has been the telecom sector. Thunuguntla ex- plains, “It was an inbound acquisi- tion where Vodafone has acquired a five per cent stake in Bharti-Air- tel. The sector in which it’s present and the elegance of management has ensured there are very modest losses in the stock in comparison to collapse of rest of the market. This has enabled Vodafone’s five per cent acquisition of Bharti turn- ing out to be a profit-making deal, in comparison to other disastrous M&As.” But coming back to tends, how- ever, the rest of the M&A scene does not offer comfort. “Globally, 95 per cent of the M&As fail,” is Thunuguntla’s stark statement. In light of this statistic Indian M&A is the trend rather than exception. Jagannadham Thunuguntla sounds a very cautious note. “Shareholders should always care- fully assess and watch any big- ticket M&A transaction, especially, when the target company is two times bigger than the acquiring company,” he said. The severe not continues. Ag- gressive M&A activity on the part of Indian companies was wrong as they spent all of their hard earned profits. “Globally, in developed countries, M&As are very preva- lent because the markets in those countries are extremely saturated and matured. In such economies, the scope of organic growth is very limited. Hence, the only way the companies can exhibit growth is through M&As in the form of inor- ganic growth,” stated Thunuguntla. Needless to add, M&A is no longer the flavour of the month. M&A activity is now on the slow- down. “Companies that have been bitten once are twice shy now,” he said. There is opportunity in every adversity, notes Thunuguntla. For the cash rich corporate this is the opportunistic time to do some smart M&As. “As rightly put by Warren Buffet, we should be fear- ful when others are greedy. And, we should be greedy when others are fearful,” Thunuguntla con- cluded. M&A are cooling down Jagannadham Thunuguntla, CEO, SMC Capitals

Afternoon Despatch Courier March 4, 2009 M&A Are Cooling Down

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ADC Business 17AFTERNOON DESPATCH & COURIERWEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2009

RIL-RPL mergerholds promiseon all fronts

As said by Alok Agaral,CFO, Reliance, the RIL-

RPL merger “is all about cre-ating a larger or integratedenergy major, it gives us theability to take on projectsmuch larger than done be-fore.”.Other than the size, the

merger gives Reliance a hugeelbow room to scale its opera-tion according to demand andfine-tune its plans of howmuch of each project tomake. As for as country’s needs areconcerned, RIL can fuel India

for 5 to six months making itless dependent on imports.The merger is a move that

will create the world’s com-plex to convert crude oil in pe-troleum products at a singlelocation. The company saidonMonday, that it would offerone share for every 16 sharesheld by investors in ReliancePetroleumLtd (RPL), its refin-ing subsidiary.RIL will issue 69.2 million

new shares to RPL sharehold-ers, increasing the equity cap-ital by 4 per cent to Rs. 1,643crore. RIL’s own 70 per centshare holding in RPL will beextinguished. The companysays the merger will increasethe earning per share in thecombined entity“I cannot think of a better

time for themerger. RIL share-holders will benefit frombringing in an asset that iscomplete now and has mini-mal project risk ( the RPL re-finery) and RPL shareholders ,by being part of the parentcompany, can again form(the) latter’s gas and oil port-folio, and can get all the bene-fits from KG Dt6(Krishna-Godavari) gas fields)which is so closed to produc-tion,” Agarwal told reportersafter announcing the mergerm deal onMonday.The counted synergies in

crude procurement, productplacement, supply chin opti-mization and greater opera-

tional flexibility as bigmergergains , besides efficientutilization of combined

cash flows” and higher valua-tion of for the merged entity..Though a few analysts were

surprised by the timing ofwhat they said was an ex-pected move, most saidmerger made strategic tech-nical and financial strengthfor RIL.. Goldman Sachs ana-lysts said onMonday the dealwill be strategically positivefor RIL as it would give thecompany access to about $1.5 to $ 1.8 billion of RPL’s an-nual cash flow (on full ramp-up for its various plannedprojects)” and “Chevron’sconcomitant exit fromRPL (atRs 60 per share) addsmargin-ally to RIL’s valuation and alsogives RIL’s promoters full con-trol and of the future directionof the company.”US energy firm Chevron

Corp. decided on Friday to sellits 5 per cent stake in RPL for$ 260 million at current ex-change rates’. Anotherfavourable point of themergerworth mentioning is thatthere is no tax or depreciationbenefit from merger that waslargely to boost RIL revenues –a fact that Agarwal confirmedin the press briefing.“The merger is not for tax

saving. Themerged entity willbe tax-neutral and we do notsee any impact. of additionaldepreciation.The rating agencies on their

part reaffirmed their ratingsfor RIL debt after the mergerwas announced.The relative importance of

RIL in all the stock indices willrise after the completion ofmerger with Reliance Petro-leum. This is because all theindices are based upon themarket . capitalization of itsconstituents and post-merger,with RPL shareholders gettingRIL stocks, themarket capital-ization of RIL will rise.. It is atechnical positive for RIL sinceits weightage in the bench-mark indices is likely to goup,” said a Goldman Sachs re-port.Commenting upon the

treasury losses RIL that RIL isrumoured to have incurred inits futures contracts, Agarwalsaid” “We had bought oil at $10 a barrel in 1999 and $ 125in 2008 and still consistentlymaintained higher gross refin-ery margins than industrybenchmarks. We would jothave got there if we do notknow how to manage thevolatility in risks..” �

BY MANIK K. MALAKAR

MUMBAI : Rupert Pennant-Rea a formerDeputy Gov-ernor of the Bank of

England once quipped, “At theBank of England we have the abil-ity to mess things up, and ourrecord shows that we have oftenused it.”That is a sentiment which com-

panies that went in for the merg-ers and acquisitions (M&A) during2005-2008 must be richly sharing.The bull market of that periodmade quite a few companies go infor M&A activity. They may yet beliving to regret their decision.AMTM (mark to market) report

indicates that M&A activity haslost a whooping 53 per cent oftheir value. This information wascompiled by JagannadhamThunuguntla, who is the CEO ofSMC Capitals, one of India’s lead-ing financial services companies.Indian companies in the period

2005-2008 took part inM&A activ-ity worth $ 45 billion dollars (oflisted Indian companies and a dealsize of more than $100 million).This value is now down to $ 20.96billion This represents a loss in

value of a staggering $ 24.04 bil-lion. Obviously not a smallamount!“Companies usually ventured

into theM&A route either for busi-ness compatibility, R&D, access toraw materials, access to cus-tomers, new product line, andother factors,” said Thunuguntla,when asked about the rationalebehind the M&A activity.The bull run of the period start-

ing from 2004 was also a factor inboosting M&A activity since In-dian businesses had large profitsand accumulated reserves.“The vaunted ‘Indian Growth

Story’ campaign was yet anotherfactor that led to some of India’sbusiness houses venture into bigticket M&As,” continuedThunuguntla. The additionalglobal attention that these dealsbring to the companies and theirpromoters was another catalyst.M&A activity was both domestic

as well as foreign. On current valu-ations, domestic MTM transac-tions have lost 42 to 43 per centwhile overseas ventures lost 60 percent. The cumulative loss averagesout to 53 per cent.A lack of hard-nosed valuations

in the M&A was a distinct feature.“An interesting point is that mostof these over-excited M&A weredone by seasoned, matured busi-

ness houses rather than the young,first-generation entrepreneurs,”reports Thunuguntla. This under-lines the point that even seasonedbusinessmen get influenced with

‘false promises’ of bull market.Continuing with this evaluation

ofM&A valuations, it is to be notedthat M&A activity of 2005 has per-formed (relatively) better than thatof 2006-2008. “This probably be-cause by the time of 2005, the in-fluence of bull markets is not infull swing and the acquirers werenot paying hyper-valuations,” ex-plains Thunuguntla.“However, in the euphoric

mindset, the Indian corporateshad bitten the cross-border M&Abug and they are now paying aheavy price,” he said. Cash-richconservative groups have now ex-hausted all their profits, their over-seas acquisitions have failed to

deliver expected results and theyare starving for cash now.In the later years, however, the

feeling of euphoria came intoplay and acquirers were not both-ered about how much they arepaying. “Most of the transactionsof 2006, 2007 were out of adrena-line-rush than out of rationality,”he said.The only sector in the M&A

space that has proved to be an ex-ception to the rule has been thetelecom sector. Thunuguntla ex-plains, “It was an inbound acquisi-tion whereVodafone has acquireda five per cent stake in Bharti-Air-tel. The sector in which it’s presentand the elegance of managementhas ensured there are verymodestlosses in the stock in comparisonto collapse of rest of the market.This has enabled Vodafone’s fiveper cent acquisition of Bharti turn-ing out to be a profit-making deal,in comparison to other disastrousM&As.”But coming back to tends, how-

ever, the rest of the M&A scenedoes not offer comfort. “Globally,95 per cent of the M&As fail,” isThunuguntla’s stark statement. Inlight of this statistic IndianM&A isthe trend rather than exception.Jagannadham Thunuguntla

sounds a very cautious note.“Shareholders should always care-fully assess and watch any big-ticketM&A transaction, especially,when the target company is twotimes bigger than the acquiringcompany,” he said.The severe not continues. Ag-

gressive M&A activity on the partof Indian companies waswrong asthey spent all of their hard earnedprofits. “Globally, in developedcountries, M&As are very preva-lent because the markets in thosecountries are extremely saturatedand matured. In such economies,the scope of organic growth is verylimited. Hence, the only way thecompanies can exhibit growth isthroughM&As in the form of inor-ganic growth,” statedThunuguntla.Needless to add, M&A is no

longer the flavour of the month.M&A activity is now on the slow-down. “Companies that have beenbitten once are twice shy now,” hesaid.There is opportunity in every

adversity, notes Thunuguntla. Forthe cash rich corporate this is theopportunistic time to do somesmart M&As. “As rightly put byWarren Buffet, we should be fear-ful when others are greedy. And,we should be greedy when othersare fearful,” Thunuguntla con-cluded. �

M&A are cooling down

Jagannadham Thunuguntla,CEO, SMC Capitals