City
Epaper

ITC's demerger move a way to ring fence against hostile takeovers

By IANS | Updated: July 30, 2023 10:05 IST

Chennai, July 30 Fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) major ITC Ltd may be ring-fencing the proposed hotel company ...

Open in App

Chennai, July 30 Fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) major ITC Ltd may be ring-fencing the proposed hotel company from future hostile takeovers by holding 40 per cent stake in that company, say analysts.

Recently, the ITC Board announced its approval to demerge its hotels' business into a separate company called ITC Hotels Ltd.

As per the de-merger scheme, ITC will hold 40 per cent stake in ITC Hotels while the remaining 60 per cent will be held by other shareholders.

ITC Hotels will pay a royalty for using the ITC brand in its name.

"Perhaps ITC has decided to hold a 40 per cent stake in ITC Hotels to avoid any hostile takeovers. If they had wanted to exit the business, they could have exited,” Shobit Singhal, Research Analyst, Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Brokers, told IANS.

Added Naveen Trivedi, Deputy Vice President, HDFC Securities: "Hotel is one business that consumes a lot of capital. The return on the investment will come later. ITC may not want any hostile takeover of the hotel company when the business starts giving returns."

While ITC does not have any Indian anchor promoter group holding a chunk of shares, about 29.10 per cent stake is held as foreign direct investment (FDI) - Tobacco Manufacturers (India) Ltd - 23.94 per cent, Rothmans International Enterprises Ltd -1.25 per cent, and Myddleton Investment Company Ltd - 3.91 per cent.

The above investment vehicles, as per the de-merger scheme, will hold about 17.4 per cent stake in ITC Hotels and there is a risk of them selling off that when the company gets listed.

If that happens, it is as if handing over the business to an acquirer on a platter at a time when the investments start paying back good.

Analysts cited the hostile takeover of software company Mindtree by L&T couple of years back.

ITC told analysts that it will not buy back the shares from the above shareholders if they decide to exit.

Today, ITC has over 11,600 keys/rooms in over 120 hotels in over 70 locations. The company is also building one hotel in Sri Lanka – the first overseas property.

Soon after the de-merger announcement, the markets reacted adversely and ITC’s share price came down by about three per cent.

Out of the total capital employed by ITC, about 20 per cent is accounted for by the hotel business while the EBITA was only about two per cent, Trivedi said.

According to Singhal, the enterprise value of ITC Hotels could be about Rs 25,000 crore.

(Venkatachari Jagannathan can be reached at v.jagannathan@ians.)

--IANS

vj/vd

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: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Hit-and-Drag: 16-Year-Old Driver Drags Pedestrian for Several Metres in Samaypur Badli; Victim Dies

NationalDelhi Murder Horror: Tailor Strangles Woman Over Loan Dispute, Dumps Body in Dabri Drain

NationalHospital Construction Scam: ED Raids AAP Leader Saurabh Bhardwaj's Residence in Delhi

NationalDelhi Metro Fight: Two Women Slap and Push Each Other Over Seat Dispute; Shocking Video Emerges (Watch)

EntertainmentJoy Banerjee Dies At 62: Bengali Actor and BJP Leader Passes Away In Kolkata Due To Respiratory Ailments

International Realted Stories

InternationalInternational advocacy group flags rising human rights violations in Bangladesh

InternationalSouth Korea's ex-first lady refuses to testify again ahead of indictment

InternationalRussian strikes kill 8, Zelesnkyy calls for a response from China

International"India-Nepal Economic Partnership Summit" 2025 commences in Nepal to accelerate bilateral economic cooperation

InternationalPM Modi-Shigeru Ishiba meet set to address pressing global challenges: India’s envoy to Japan Sibi George