Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Tuesday, Nov 21, 2006
ePaper


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Steel
Corporate - Mergers & Acquisitions
Markets - Stocks
Get Latest BSE Quote
CSN begins due diligence on Corus; Tata Steel scrip down

Our Bureau

Uncertainty hits stock prices


Re-working strategy
Tata Steel has adopted a wait-and-watch stance, as CSN is yet to come out with a firm offer
Sources said the top brass at Bombay House was preparing to increase its bid.

Mumbai , Nov. 20

Amidst indications that Tata Steel was gearing up for a bidding war to out-race Brazilian Steel maker CSN, for acquiring Anglo-Dutch steel company Corus Group, the price of the Indian steel major's shares fell on the stock exchanges on Monday.

The uncertainty, arising after CSN's counter bid and fears that Tata Steel's possible move to increase its bid for Corus may put a squeeze on its finances, drove its share prices down, analysts believe.

Tata Steel shares tumbled to a low of Rs 459 during the day from the previous closing price of Rs 475.95, before settling at Rs 463.40, mirroring a fall of Rs 12.53 (2.64 per cent).

CSN, which approached Corus with a counter bid of 475 pence per share, against Tata's bid of 455 pence, has begun the process of due diligence and is expected to come out with a firm bid before the Corus shareholders' meet on December 4.

Although Tata Steel officials were tight-lipped about the company's next move, there were indications that CSN's counter-bid did not take the Indian steel maker by surprise.

"Tata Steel has limited options at the moment. The only way it can take the deal forward is to out-bid CSN," an analyst tracking the Tata-Corus development said.

Tata Steel's board had approved the proposed acquisition of Corus at 455 pence per share in cash, valuing 100 per cent equity of Corus at Rs 37,286 crore.

The acquisition was proposed to be financed through equity contribution by Tata Steel of about $3.5 billion (Rs 15,862 crore) and the balance through non-recourse debt on Tata Steel UK to be serviced by cash flows from Corus.

The company was confident that the transaction could be closed by the middle of January 2007.

Wait-and-watch

At the moment Tata Steel has adopted a wait-and-watch stance, as CSN is yet to come out with a firm offer. Only after Corus's response to CSN's bid becomes clear will the Indian steel maker come out with its next move.

Sources, however, said the top brass at Bombay House was preparing to increase its bid and re-working its financial strategy to take control of Corus.

After Tata announced its bid for Corus, Crisil had placed Tata Steel's ratings on `Watch with Negative Implications'.

"The rating action follows Tata Steel's offer to buy 100 per cent of the equity of Corus Group for an overall consideration of over Rs 30,000 crore . The proposed acquisition cost is significantly larger than Tata Steel's current consolidated net worth of about Rs 10,200 crore," Crisil had said on October 18.

Related Stories:
Top brokers upgrade target price for Corus
Corus gives early conversion option to Dutch bondholders
Corus: Counter bid hurdle goes for Tatas
Tata Steel UK offers loan note option for Corus shareholders
Tatas to buy Corus for $8 b

More Stories on : Steel | Mergers & Acquisitions | Stocks | Tata Steel Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Adclub BL Hiring

Stories in this Section
Cyclonic circulation drifts away


`3G mobile services launch on track'
CDMA operators to run 3G trials in Jan
Farming based on zodiac principles of crop calendar
Manufacturing sees 12.1 pc growth in H1
`Free trade pact with China not now'
Hotels more caring of staff as poaching is on the rise
Wanted: 2 lakh pharmacists a year
CSN begins due diligence on Corus; Tata Steel scrip down
M&M scouts for distributor in Central Africa
`Huge untapped PC market in 4 Asian nations'
Market volatile, gains at close
Gateway Distri: Traffic hopes
Allahabad Bank: On fundamentals
FDI inflows double in first half to $4.4 b
`No curbs on FDI from any country'



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line