Analysis: Deadly protests land a blow to Indian resources magnate Agarwal's ambitions

Reuters  |  NEW DELHI 

By and Promit Mukherjee

But in his home country, where he rose from a to a metals magnate, court-imposed fines, costly plant and mine shutdowns, and public protests against his businesses for allegedly polluting the environment, have held back his lofty ambitions and hurt the company's valuation, according to bankers and analysts.

The struggle with opponents took a particularly ugly turn on Tuesday when police opened fire on protesters seeking to shut down Vedanta's copper smelter in the southern Indian port city of Thoothukudi, killing 10. Another person died on Wednesday.

Vedanta did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment.

"This can lead to investors becoming more conscious against investing in the company which can hurt long term sustainability of some of the businesses," said Shriram Subramanian, of proxy advisory firm InGovern, adding that the violence in suggested they weren't listening to concerns about the environment and health issues.

Agarwal, who holds a 71.4 percent stake in Vedanta, told in an interview published on Wednesday that he plans to step back from running the company.

TEMPORARY HALT

Agarwal said on earlier this month that his company was the victim of a foreign conspiracy aimed at keeping reliant on imports. He did not name any specific countries or companies.

"Certain vested interests will prefer to remain import dependent and use our country as their market, making India spend hard-earned foreign exchange and lose millions of jobs," he said, in reference to a court-ordered stoppage of in state, the campaign against the copper plant and a shortage of bauxite for an aluminium smelter.

A court on Wednesday put a temporary halt to Vedanta's much-delayed plan to nearly double capacity at the plant, which would make it one of the biggest copper smelters in the world.

Residents and activists say emissions from the plant, India's second biggest, are polluting the air and water, affecting people's health.

Vedanta has denied the allegations and said it was working on restarting the plant as soon as possible. Analysts say copper contributes around 8 percent to the consolidated operating profit of the company.

Investors sent Vedanta's London-listed shares down 7 percent in afternoon trading on Wednesday despite the company posting better-than-expected full-year results. Its Indian stock closed down more than 6 percent.

At about eight times, the company has the lowest price to earnings ratio among eight top London-listed resources companies including Anglo American, Rio Tinto, and Glencore, according to SmartEstimate.

Vedanta analysts are split on their recommendation on the stock: five rate it 'strong buy' or 'buy', while three have placed 'hold' on the stock and two have tagged it a 'sell'.

ELEMENT OF FEAR

Several investment bankers said that Vedanta's management did have a strong reputation for turning around businesses and keeping costs under control.

"Still, there is always an element of fear among the investors," said an in reference to the various controversies it is entangled in. The banker, who has previously advised the company, declined to be named.

Vedanta, whose acquisitive journey started with Agarwal buying a copper company in 1979, now has businesses spread across the world, including India, Africa, and It was the first Indian company to list in in 2003.

But that listing meant it became the target of a sustained campaign by a London-registered group called Vedanta, which holds demonstrations outside Vedanta's annual meetings in

The government-run dropped Vedanta from its investment portfolio in 2007, partly because of issues in India. In 2014, the fund dropped Vedanta's then unit,

Norway's Council on Ethics, which makes recommendations to the pension fund, said it did a "particularly thorough assessment" of in 2016 and found grounds to stay away from it. Edinburgh-based investment fund has also sold off its Vedanta shares on ethical grounds.

In Thootukudi, Vedanta's copper plant has been shut for more than 50 days and will remain closed until at least June 6 because the local pollution regulator has said the facility is not complying with environmental rules.

Several cases have been filed against the plant since it started in 1996, and India's top court in 2013 fined it about $18 million for breaking environmental laws.

The next year, Vedanta lost a battle to mine bauxite in the a lushly forested area, Niyamgiri hills in Odisha state, that the Dongria Kondh tribe there considers sacred.

The rejection forced the company to not only import expensive bauxite for an aluminium plant in the same state but to also delay its expansion.

(Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Edited by Martin Howell)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 23 2018. 21:23 IST