Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Sep 23, 2005

News
Features
Stocks
Port Info
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Corporate - Rights Issue


Jessop & Co plans 5:1 rights issue

Our Bureau

Kolkata , Sept. 22

JESSOP & Co today announced plans to come out with a Rs 50-crore rights issue of shares of Re 1 each approximately at the rate of five new shares for each existing share held.

Market analysts say that as the Centre currently owns a 27-per-cent stake in the company, the issue may mark an increase in the shareholding of the Ruia Group to approximately 94 per cent in case the Government of India does not subscribe to the issue. In that event, the Centre's shareholding may decline to just five per cent. The company now has a mere 1 per cent public shareholding.

It may be noted that as per the shareholders agreement and the guidelines stipulated by the BIFR for the proposed rights issue, none of the promoters can divest rights in favour of a third party.

Further, the Centre will have to offer its stake to the Ruia group at the end of a three-year period on August 29, 2006. Earlier, the Ruia group had offered to buy back the Centre's stake offering a price higher than the acquisition price of Rs 2.67 per share (against a face value of Rs 10 per share).

Meanwhile, after getting BIFR approval, the company has reduced the face value of its shares from Rs 10 to Re 1 each leading to a reduction in the paid-up equity capital from Rs 95 crore to Rs 9.5 crore. The exercise has created a fund of Rs 85.5 crore which was set off against an accumulated loss of Rs 118 crore as on March 31, 2005.

Mr Ruia said: "With a Rs 50-crore capital infusion in the form of rights, the paid-up equity base will be Rs 59.5 crore (as against an accumulated loss of Rs 32.5 crore) making the company's networth positive which in turn will help the company to be delisted from BIFR".

He added that delisting from BIFR would help the company to secure bank finance for its future projects.

On the rights issue, he said it would meet the working capital needs of the company. "Jessop requires a total of Rs 150 crore to finance Rs 30 crore capital expenditure, Rs 70 crore working capital requirement and Rs 50 crore non-fund capital requirement primarily for issuing bank guarantees to railways, and so on."

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



Tata Safari Dicor

Stories in this Section
HOEC strikes oil in Gujarat


Sanmar Group co sells more stake in India Cements
Glenmark files for Phase I trials in UK on diabetes drug
Sterlite share allotment
Sakthi Sugars allocates Rs 25 cr for cane price equalisation fund
SQL Star to raise Rs 50 crore, restructure operations
SpiceJet to close $70-m FCCB issue in October
CLC bags Texprocil award for fabric export
Herbertsons board okays merger with McDowell
For better corporate governance — `Independent directors must serve on fewer boards'
Kudremukh to invest Rs 1,500 cr in expansion
Fuel woes may dampen NTPC's new projects
Strides, Jubilant among cos setting up new units in Karnataka
Tata Motors, Fiat tie up to explore cooperation in passenger car segment
HPCL, Maharashtra tie up for bio-diesel venture
Tata-Fiat alliance takes shape
DUBAL, L&T to set up Rs 15,000-cr refinery
Bravo, Tata!
Donation for school building
Jessop & Co plans 5:1 rights issue
Mallya unveils road map to form United Spirits
IOC will maintain profitability: Behuria
HPCL plans LNG terminal at Mundra — Eyeing stake in Hazira import terminal


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

Copyright © 2005, 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