The Department of Disinvestment has put off overseas roadshows to promote the sale of a 10 per cent Government stake in Indian Oil Corp (IOC) following stiff opposition from the Petroleum Ministry, which cited poor market conditions.
“IOC roadshows have been deferred. It is not happening this month. We will see again next month,” a Government official said.
The roadshows, which were planned to attract foreign investors for the disinvestment in IOC, were due to start in London today, followed by the US, Singapore, Hong Kong and Dubai next week. The Petroleum Ministry opposed the proposal, saying the country’s crown jewels could not be sold at low prices.
IOC shares have fallen about 45 per cent from their 52-week peak of Rs 375 on January 18. The shares rose 1.5 per cent to Rs 207.95 at the close on the BSE today.
The sale of 19.16 crore IOC shares at current prices would fetch about Rs 4,000 crore, equivalent to a tenth of this year’s disinvestment target. The Government held a 78.92 per cent stake in the country’s largest oil refiner as of June 30.
The decision to postpone the roadshows followed a meeting on Tuesday at which Oil Secretary Vivek Rae is believed to have asked Disinvestment Secretary Ravi Mathur to defer the plan in view of poor market conditions.
Hours before the meeting, Rae had told presspersons: “We cannot...sell an IOC share at Rs 200. You have to balance out the need for mobilising Rs 40,000 crore from disinvestment along with the fact that you cannot sell your crown jewels at low prices.”
Citibank, HSBC and UBS Securities are among the five merchant bankers selected to manage the IOC share sale.
A share sale under present conditions could fetch a low price and would further dent IOC’s efforts to raise loans for crude oil imports.
“The current share price of IOC, already undervalued, may not fetch a fair value in the prevailing uncertain environment and investors in all probability are likely to factor in huge discounts in their assessment of share price,” IOC Chairman R. S. Butola wrote to the Oil Ministry last week.
IOC, he wrote, was of the “strong view that the current timing of the disinvestment is not in the interest of all stakeholders.”
Butola said investors are concerned about uncertainties such as lack of a transparent subsidy-sharing mechanism, fluctuation in profitability and liquidity constraints.
Comments
Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.
We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of TheHindu Businessline and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.