Advertisement

Help
You are here: Rediff Home » India » Business » Special » Features
Search:  Rediff.com The Web
Advertisement
  Discuss this Article   |      Email this Article   |      Print this Article

Reliance demerger: What should you do?
Salil Panchal/ Morpheus Inc. in Mumbai
 
 · My Portfolio  · Live market report  · MF Selector  · Broker tips
Get Business updates:What's this?
Advertisement
January 17, 2006

A unique investment and trading era ends today at the Indian stock markets. Reliance Industries [Get Quote], India's largest private sector company, having the widest investor base in the country (over 3.1 million) and group revenues equivalent to about 2.6 per cent of India's GDP, trades for the last day today as a consolidated company.

As per the demerger approved by the RIL board in August last year, the Ambani brothers -- Mukesh and Anil -- will head different businesses and five listed companies will emerge as potential investment opportunities by March FY 2006.

Of these, Reliance Industries, Reliance Capital [Get Quote] and Reliance Energy [Get Quote] are already listed at the exchanges and they will now get re-valued by analysts in a new demerged business scenario. Two other companies will be listed by March-end.

The new structure

The new structure gives Mukesh Ambani complete and independent control over the oil exploration, refining, petrochemicals and textiles businesses through a 'core' / standalone Reliance Industries and the refinery Indian Petrochemicals Corporation [Get Quote]. He will also get the biotech firm Reliance Life Sciences and Trevira, a European company manufacturing polyester fibres.

Anil Ambani will get control over power, communications and financial services undertakings through four companies which come under the umbrella of the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Enterprise (ADAE) group, as part of the Reliance group.

These four companies will be Reliance Capital Ventures Ltd (to be amalgamated with listed Reliance Capital), Reliance Energy Ventures (to be amalgamated with Reliance Energy), Reliance Communication Ventures (mainly including Reliance Infocomm and Reliance Telecom) and Global Fuel Management Services (for gas-based energy undertakings).

What happens tomorrow?

The Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange will hold a special one-hour trading session on Wednesday, January 18, from 8.00-9.00 a.m. to facilitate price discovery of the post-demerger price for Reliance Industries Ltd.

Only Reliance Industries will be traded in this session, without circuit filters, while the unlisted companies will be listed in coming months.

While the special trading session is on, it will not affect the overall market or Sensex / Nifty.

The closing price for Reliance Industries after the special trading session will be used to determine the opening level of indices (and a new RIL weightage in the indices) at 10.00 a.m. on Wednesday. The volume weighted average price of RIL during this above session will be used for adjustment to the base market capitalisation of the respective indices.

What does the RIL shareholder get?

The Reliance shareholder will continue to hold the same number of shares he holds today. In addition, he would receive additional shares of the new demerged entities, as per the demerger ratio.

All RIL shareholders will be issued shares of the demerged companies in a 1:1 ratio. So if a shareholder holds 100 Reliance Industries shares he would get:

100 shares of Reliance Communications [Get Quote] Ventures Ltd, 100 shares of Reliance Energy Ventures Ltd (REVL), 100 shares of Reliance Capital Ventures Ltd (RECL) and 100 shares of Global Fuel Management Services Ltd.

With REVL being amalgamation with Reliance Energy and RECL with Reliance Capital -- following a board decision -- RIL shareholders will thus receive shares of REL and Reliance Capital based on an earlier approved independent swap ratio.

The ratio approved is 7.5 shares of Reliance Energy for 100 shares of REVL held and 5 shares of Reliance Capital for 100 shares of RECL held.

What could be Reliance's value? Should one hold it?

The key issue that investors should remember is that we will look at a 'new' core Reliance Industries, which has its expertise in oil and gas exploration. Risks would be lower as some 'unrelated' business undertakings will be demerged.

Some analysts say there will be unlocking of value and if an RIL shareholder holds these shares, he will continue to receive benefits in terms of growth from unrelated Reliance Capital, Energy and Infocomm businesses anyway.

Where could the Reliance price go?

It would be wrong to speculate the exact level or range for the stock, but most analysts see the December-end third quarter financial earnings as a blip, which has been accounted for.

The closure of the Jamnagar refinery was planned and expected. Even if the Reliance stock trades volatile on Wednesday and slips lower, its short-term valuation is expected to be strong with some analysts keeping a Rs 1,000 target price (based on core strengths discussed earlier). More benefits will accrue when other demerged stocks are listed.

Looking at the technical charts, Reliance has corrected over the last eight trading sessions indicating an oversold situation on the daily chart. The medium- to long-term trend is very clearly up. Strong support comes in at Rs 866 indicating a rather limited downside from here.

Resistance comes in at Rs 887 and Rs 902 levels. The overall picture remains positive indicating the continuation of its long-term uptrend.

Most domestic fund houses and research firms continue to place an 'outperformer' investor rating for Reliance.

The Reliance stock has 12 per cent weightage in Sensex, the 30-share sensitive index of the Bombay Stock Exchange.

More Specials
 Email this Article      Print this Article

© 2008 Rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer | Feedback