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Tata Steel emerges as top bidder for Bhushan Steel

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Promit Mukherjee

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Ltd said on Wednesday it had been selected as the highest bidder to buy a controlling stake in debt-laden Bhushan Ltd, ending weeks of speculation on which Indian group would clinch a deal.

conglomerate Group's business and India's biggest domestic steelmaker Ltd were the two primary industry bidders for the acquisition of Bhushan

At 559.89 billion rupees ($8.75 billion), Bhushan faces the highest claims among a dozen companies pushed to bankruptcy court last year as part of a government drive to clear a mountain of bad loans choking credit at Indian banks.

"It (Steel) has been identified as the highest evaluated compliant resolution applicant to acquire controlling stake of BSL (Bhushan Ltd)," the company said in a stock exchange notice on Wednesday evening.

Based in the east of India, the company has an annual steelmaking capacity of 5.6 million tonnes and is one of the biggest producers of products used to make cars.

It also supplies for producing consumer goods such as refrigerators and washing machines.

A controlling stake in Bhushan gives an edge in the fast growing market in at a time of strong price upswing, a note from brokerage said.

Tata's access to ore mines also puts it in a much better position to turn around Bhushan Steel's unit.

"can add the maximum value as well as draw the most benefit from Bhushan Steel," said an who covers both the industry.

Bhushan had said last month that the resolution professional managing its case received plans from Steel, JSW Living, a subsidiary of JSW Steel, and employees of Bhushan

India, which did not have a formal bankruptcy process until mid-2016, has seen a surge in bankruptcy cases since last year, with over 500 companies currently facing bankruptcy court proceedings.

The surge in cases comes after the government changed the law giving greater powers to the Reserve of (RBI), which has so far to push nearly 40 companies with loan defaults of nearly 4 trillion rupees ($62.5 billion) into bankruptcy proceedings.

Essar Ltd, another company with a heap of sour loans owed to banks, has seen heightened interest and aggressive bidding from world's biggest steelmaker and a consortium led by Russian VTB, according to

(Reporting by in Mumbai; Additional reporting by in Bengaluru; Editing by and Keith Weir)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 07 2018. 20:23 IST
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