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Tata
Steel to raise $4.1 billion to fund Corus acquisition
Business Standard April
18, 2007
To aid Corus buy via issue of
equity and preference shares, overseas listing.
In the biggest fund-raising effort by an Indian company,
Tata Steel, the world's fifth-largest steel company,
today announced a rights issue of equity and preference
shares to mobilise Rs10,000 crore to part-finance the
acquisition of Anglo-Dutch steel company Corus Group
for $12.9 billion (Rs53,850 crore).
The plan, which bets on a recovery in steel prices,
includes an overseas listing of Rs2,100 crore.
While the rights offer of equity shares will raise Rs3,655
crore, the convertible preference shares will net Rs4,350
crore.
Priced at Rs300 a share, one rights equity share will
be given to shareholders for every five shares they
hold. The pricing of the rights issue is 43.1 per cent
lower than the stock's closing price of Rs528 on the
Bombay Stock Exchange today.
This will be the third rights issue by Tata Steel in
the last 22 years and the first share sale after 15
years. The company had a 1:3 rights offer in 1988 and
a 2:5 offer in 1993.
The company will simultaneously issue preference shares
that can be converted into shares at Rs500 to Rs600
each after two years. Shareholders will get one share
for every seven held and will be paid a coupon of 2
per cent.
Tata Sons, the main promoters of Tata Steel, will subscribe
to the unsubscribed portion of these rights issues.
The promoters hold a shade over 30 per cent in Tata
Steel.
Addressing the media after a board meeting today, Tata
Steel managing director B Muthuraman said the fund-raising
effort is in line with the company's equity commitment
of $4.1 billion (Rs17,750 crore) for the Corus acquisition.
This amount will be put into Tata Steel's subsidiary,
Tata Steel Asia Holdings (Singapore), which will invest
the money in Tata Steel UK, the investment vehicle for
the Corus acquisition.
Tata Steel has already raised Rs7,940 crore through
internal generation of Rs3,000 crore, external commercial
borrowings of Rs2,170 crore and a preferential issue
of Rs2,770 crore, he said.
When asked, N A Soonawala, vice-chairman of Tata Sons,
said Tata Steel's equity capital would be increased
to Rs850 crore from Rs580 crore after all these issues.
Koushik Chatterjee, chief financial officer, Tata Steel,
said the consolidated debt-equity ratio will exceed
1 after these issues. The current debt:equity ratio
is 0.3. However, he said, the ratio will come down below
1 in the near future.
Of the total $12.9 billion to be paid for Corus, Tata
Steel will contribute $4.1 billion to fund the purchase
and raise $6.14 billion of loans. A further $2.66 billion
is being raised overseas as bridge finance, or a short-term
loan, Muthuraman said.
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