Crashing markets spell trouble for India’s privatization plans

By Manoj Kumar and Rajesh Kumar Singh

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The collapse of the rupee is derailing India‘s hopes of raising more than $6 billion from the sale of stakes in state-run firms, jeopardizing a key plank of Finance Minister P.Chidambaram’s blueprint to reverse the country’s economic malaise.

Investor confidence has evaporated amid fears over the rising cost of funding India’s gaping current account deficit, prompting New Delhi to delay plans to raise much-needed funds through partial privatizations, finance ministry sources said.

Hit by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s preparations to wind down monetary stimulus, which is driving up borrowing costs globally, India’s rupee has lost 17 percent since May - touching an all-time low of 65.56 to the dollar on Thursday - and the stock market is close to its lowest in 12 months.

“In the current situation, we cannot go to the market. We may have to wait for some more time before the market stabilizes,” said an official who attended a meeting with the finance minister on Monday to plan for the next three months.

Three weeks ago the cabinet deferred a decision on selling an 11 percent stake in hydropower producer NHPC, which it had hoped would raise $300 million, after the power ministry raised concerns it would be undervalued in the current market.

Chidambaram announced in February a target of 400 billion rupees ($6.2 billion) for this fiscal year through partial sell-offs of state-run firms, as part of his efforts to stave off a threatened ratings downgrade by reducing the fiscal deficit to 4.8 percent of GDP.

His ministry has not officially abandoned the target - which many private sector economists already considered optimistic - and is hopeful conditions will improve before the financial year ends next March.

The top official from the finance ministry‘s divestment department, Ravi Mathur, is on a tour this week to Singapore and Malaysia to drum up investor interest in the stake sales and in a proposed exchange-traded fund of state-run companies.

“We need a short window of two months to raise the funds,” a senior government official with direct knowledge of the stake-sale program said. He asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

“No one can say with certainty for how long the market will remain volatile,” he said, adding that if it stabilized by the end of next month, the government could sell stakes in companies in October and November.

CURRENCY SLIDE

Past experience, however, shows that hitting the stake-sale target might be difficult. Similar goals were missed in each of the last three fiscal years, when market conditions were better.

India raised 239.56 billion rupees in fiscal 2012/13 against an initial target of 300 billion, and 138.94 billion rupees in the previous year against a target of 400 billion.

While a weak rupee makes Indian assets more affordable to foreign buyers, with no end in sight to the current crash rupee assets bought now will likely lose value in dollar terms.

Currency weakness particularly reduces the attractiveness of Indian Oil Corporation (IOC). Sales of shares in IOC and Coal India Limited were expected to raise the bulk of the total stake sale target for this year.

IOC, the country’s biggest refiner and retailer, sells fuels at state-set lower prices and gets partial compensation for the revenue losses through federal subsidies. However, because of the rupee’s slide, its oil import bill has risen sharply, which has derailed plans to end subsidies on diesel by June 2013.

IOC’s shares have dropped 30 percent since the beginning of May, when the rupee began its descent.

“All our oil companies now face difficult times,” another finance ministry official said, noting it would not be easy to sell the stake in IOC because of the growing revenue losses.

In this fiscal year, which began in April, the government has so far raised $203 million by selling stakes in seven companies, including Hindustan Copper, MMTC Indian Tourism Development Corp. and Neyveli Lignite Corp..

UNION PUSHBACK

Plans to sell a 10 percent stake in Coal India have already been scaled back to 5 percent because of resistance from unions that now oppose any privatization of the world’s largest coal company. They plan a three-day strike next month to stop the 5 percent sale from going ahead.

“Maybe the process (stake sale) itself might get delayed. (It) may not take place unless the market looks up,” Coal India’s personnel and industrial relations director, R. Mohan Das, told Reuters.

In June, Chidambaram said the government planned to raise nearly 200 billion rupees ($3.15 billion) from the sale of the 10 percent stake in Coal India alone. Now the government could expect to raise just $2 billion jointly from the sales of Coal India and IOC stakes, given current market valuations.

The cabinet approved the IOC share sale this month, the officials said. Divestments in Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd and Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd. before March 2014 are also key to the government’s plans. ($1 = 64.2900 Indian rupees)

(Additional reporting by Malini Menon and Nidhi Verma; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by John Chalmers and Alex Richardson)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

>