No tax on $6.38 bn transaction with Adani Group, says Holcim

May 17, 2022 07:14 pm | Updated 07:14 pm IST - New Delhi

Swiss building material major Holcim has said its $6.38 billion deal with Asia’s richest man Gautam Adani’s group is tax-free.

Holcim had on Sunday signed a binding agreement with the Adani Group to sell its business in India – about a 63% stake in Ambuja Cement – which owns a 54.53 stake in ACC (of which 4.48% is direct shareholding).

“So, according to our analysis, it is a tax-free transaction,” Holcim CEO Jan Jenisch said while addressing investors after the deal on Monday.

When asked about the tax implications, he said: “Never know if any complication arises, but we assume that we will get the 6.4 billion Swiss Francs as net proceeds.”

As per the deal, Adani Group will acquire Holcim’s full stake in Ambuja Cement and ACC for CHF (Swiss franc) 6.4 billion ($6.38 billion).

A day after, Adani also made an open offer to acquire a 26% stake each in the two listed companies – Ambuja Cements and ACC Ltd. – from public shareholders.

The Adani family is routing the deal through Mauritius-based subsidiary Endeavour Trade and Investment, which is promoted by Acropolis Trade and Investment Ltd.

“The ultimate beneficial ownership of Acropolis Trade and Investment Ltd. is held by certain members of the Adani family,” as per the open offer. Holcim expects the deal to close in the second half of this year.

The Swiss building major is also confident of getting the regulatory approval from the Competition Commission of India for the entire deal, which is estimated to be around $10.5 billion.

“We have quite a simple contract. So, basically, the only condition precedent is the approval of the Competition Commission of India, this has nothing to do with any potential litigation as a standard process... as Adani doesn’t have building materials in his portfolio today, it is expected that this will be a very fast approval,” Mr. Jenisch said.

This is a simple contract, where Holcim is basically selling the company’s shares in the two businesses, he asserted.

“So, very straightforward. And no further conditions, no further due diligence, or anything involved in the transaction. So, cross fingers, this should go quite smooth over the next two to three months,” he added.

Besides, Holcim also said that the new owner would be liable for the fines imposed by the CCI on Ambuja Cements and ACC after the sales.

When asked if any investigations pending in India would lead to a fine either on Ambuja or ACC, who would have to pay, Mr. Jenisch said: “It will be with the new owner. We have sold the company... there would be no indemnification from our side.”

The fair trade regulator had slapped a fine of ₹1,148 crore on ACC and ₹1,164 crore on Ambuja Cements. Both companies have challenged the fine before the appellate authority, which had in July 2018 dismissed their plea.

This is presently pending before the Supreme Court.

Adani Group on Monday through Endeavour Trade and Investment has made an open offer at ₹385 per share for Ambuja Cements Ltd. and ₹2,300 per share for ACC Ltd.

For Ambuja Cements, Adani Group has made an open offer to its public shareholders to acquire up to 51.63 crore equity shares, representing 26% of the expanded share capital, aggregating to a total consideration of ₹19,879.57 crore.

For ACC Ltd., Adani Group has offered to acquire up to 4.89 crore shares held by public shareholders, representing 26% of the expanded share capital, aggregating to a total consideration of ₹11,259.97 crore.

The world’s largest cement maker Holcim last month announced its exit from the country after struggling here for a long.

Ambuja Cements and ACC currently have a combined installed production capacity of 70 million tonnes per annum. The two companies together have 23 cement plants, 14 grinding stations, 80 ready-mix concrete plants and over 50,000 channel partners across India.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

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 The Hindu 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.