Lakshmi Mittal: Steely resolve
A winning Essar Steel bid will mark Mittal's homecoming


After nearly six months of litigation NuMetal was relegated to the corner after they were asked to pay up approximately the ₹48,000 crore that Essar owed the banks. As the committee of creditors sat down to vote there was high drama with Essar making a last minute attempt to pay off the creditors and take the company out of the bankruptcy process. A day later the lenders declared ArcelorMittal the winner on the basis of them submitting the highest bid along with a revival plan. The steelmaker had also cleared its dues in Uttam Galva and KSS Petron to have its bid for Essar Steel considered. For now, unless there are new legal challenges from Essar, Mittal’s entry into the Indian market seems certain.A winning bid is a homecoming of sorts for Mittal. Since he left Calcutta in the 1970s to run his family’s steel mill in Indonesia he’s never produced steel in India. Over the years he’s also realised how difficult it is to enter India with a greenfield plant. Over the last decade South Korea’s POSCO has had to abandon plans to set up a plant in Odisha due to land acquisition problems. Tata Steel’s Kalinganagar expansion, also in Odisha, was plagued by delays. ArcelorMittal has made two attempts to set up greenfield plants in Jharkhand and Odisha only to fail mainly on account of land acquisition problems. The only project that hasn’t been abandoned so far is an automotive steel joint venture with the state-owned Steel Authority of India.
Since 2010, crude steel production in India has risen 4.6 percent a year to 95 million tonnesFurther exacerbating ArcelorMittal’s frustration is the fact that India is the world’s fastest growing steel market. Since 2010, crude steel production has risen 4.6 percent a year to 95 million tonnes, according to data from the World Steel Association. With Indian infrastructure spending rising, the Ministry of Steel expects installed capacity to rise from 128 million tonnes in 2018 to 300 million tonnes in 2030. At 69 kg per person, India has one of the lowest per capita steel consumption (see table). As a result, it’s no surprise that the recent bids for bankrupt steel plants in India —Bhushan Steel, Monnet Ispat, Electrosteel Steels—have seen the banks recover almost all their pending dues. In fact, some analysts believe the acquirers could have overpaid if the steel cycle turns for the worse.
To view the full India"s 100 Richest 2018 list, click hereThe Indian bankruptcy auction also came at an opportune time for Mittal as he’s spent the decade since the financial crisis deleveraging his balance sheet. The company aims to bring its net debt down from $10.5 billion to $6 billion in the medium term. “We believe this is the level that will ensure we are able to maintain an investment grade rating through any point in the cycle,” said Mittal. The Essar acquisition will see ArcelorMittal take on additional debt.
First Published: Nov 02, 2018, 17:17
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