City
Epaper

Centre lowers FY23 divestment target to Rs 65K crore

By IANS | Updated: February 1, 2022 19:20 IST

New Delhi, Feb 1 The Centre has drastically lowered the divestment target for fiscal 2022-23 to Rs 65,000 ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 1 The Centre has drastically lowered the divestment target for fiscal 2022-23 to Rs 65,000 crore.

According to the budget documents' 'Miscellaneous Capital Receipts', the current fiscal FY22's target was revised to Rs 78,000 crore from the budget estimates of Rs 1.75 lakh crore.

The Centre had planned major divestments and strategic sale of Air India, BPCL, public sector banks, an insurance company amongst others.

Besides, LIC's IPO has been targeted to be completed by March 31, 2022.

As per the budget document's 'Disinvestment of Government stake in Public Sector Banks and Financial Institutions', the revised target for FY22 has been brought down to nil from Rs 100,000 lakh crore.

The budget document did not mention any target on account of 'Disinvestment of Government stake in Public Sector Banks and Financial Institutions' for FY23.

"Towards implementation of the new Public Sector Enterprise policy, the strategic transfer of ownership of Air India has been completed. The strategic partner for NINL (Neelanchal Ispat Nigam Ltd) has been selected," said Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman while presenting the Union Budget FY23 in Parliament.

Many industry statkeholders said the budget estimate is realistic and achievable.

Emkay Global Financial Services Managing Director Krishna Kumar Karwa said: "The public issue of the LIC is expected shortly. Others too are in the process for 2022-23.The divestment target at Rs 65,000 crore should be easily achievable."

Acuite Ratings and Research Chief Analytical Officer, Suman Chowdhury, said: "While the initial budgeted revenue target was Rs 175,000 crore for FY22, it has been substantially scaled down to Rs 78,000 crore and highlights the uncertainty regarding the LIC IPO.

"Going forward, a moderate amount of Rs 65,000 crore has been earmarked for FY23 which is more realistic given the time frame taken for such transactions. It is evident that the government is unlikely to pursue PSU disinvestment in an aggressive manner over the next 1-2 years."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Air IndiaBpclNirmala SitharamanKrishna kumar karwa
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessAnil Ambani’s Reliance Power Shares Rise After Businessman Seeks Structured Settlement of Bank Dues

InternationalAir India A350 From New York to Delhi Diverted to Ireland After Suspected Technical Issue

InternationalDubai International Airport Suspends Flight Operations; Air India and Air India Express Cancel Flights

InternationalHyderabad-Phuket Air India Express Flight Faces Nose Wheel Issue After Landing in Thailand, Runway Closed

NationalAir India Increases Flights to Toronto, Frankfurt, and Paris To Clear Rush

International Realted Stories

InternationalTaiwan detects 6 Chinese vessels, 1 ship around itself

InternationalHormuz crisis hits economy across world: Report

InternationalIranian commander vows 'devastating, continuous' retaliations if US, Israel target infrastructure

International"Economic oppression": Public outcry in Rawalpindi, Islamabad as petrol hits PKR 459 per litre

International"Stop this madness": Former IAEA chief urges Gulf, UN to act after Trump's 48-hour ultimatum against Iran