Sesa Goa, Sterlite merger gets Madras High Court nod
PTI
  

NEW DELHI, JULY 25:  
The proposed merger between Sesa Goa and Sterlite Industries, aimed at creating 
a mega natural resources firm from India, has moved a step closer towards 
realisation with the nod from the Madras High Court today.
“The proposed merger of Sterlite and Sesa Goa and Vedanta Group Consolidation 
has received the approval of the High Court of Madras on July 25, 2013 and the 
approval of the High Court of Bombay at Goa on April 3, 2013,” Sterlite said in 
a statement.
As per the merger scheme, Sterlite will be merged into Sesa Goa and a new 
entity Sesa Sterlite will be created post merger. All other subsidiaries of 
Vedanta, except Konkola Copper Mines, would be controlled by Sesa Sterlite 
after completion of the process.
The merger would create seventh largest natural resources company of the world 
(in terms of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation) 
and a cost saving of Rs 1,000 crore annually, Vedanta had said earlier.
The merger scheme has already been approved by most of the regulatory 
authorities, including Goa Bench of the Bombay High Court, the Competition 
Commission of India, BSE and NSE.
Shareholders of Sterlite and Sesa Goa have already given their approval in 
June, 2012.
A glitch in realising the merger is a review petition filed by a shareholder of 
Sesa Goa in the Bombay High Court, challenging the court order.
However, Sterlite said “hearing before the Division Bench (of Bombay High Court 
at Goa) has been completed and the order of the Division Bench is awaited.”
Post merger, Vedanta would hold 58.3 per cent stake in Sesa Sterlite. As per 
the scheme of arrangements, Sterlite shareholders would get three shares of 
Sesa Goa for every five shares held according to the swap ratio.
This is second restructuring exercise being attempted by Vedanta Resources as 
the first one in 2008 had failed due to objections raised by some minority 
shareholders over valuation of a group firm, Konkola Copper Mines.

Cairn India, Hindustan Zinc, Balco, Vedanta Aluminium, Madras Aluminium, 
Talwandi Sabo Power and Australian Copper Mines will become subsidiaries of 
Sesa Sterlite after the restructuring.
The restructuring would lead to Vedanta’s debt burden on a standalone basis 
falling to around $3.8 billion.However, Sesa Sterlite, the new entity, would 
end up with a total debt of about $14 billion.

Shares of Sesa Goa fell by 2.24 per cent to close at 139.95 apiece on the BSE 
and the Sterlite scrip closed down 2.07 per cent at Rs 80.30.
 
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FN * Independent Journalist http://fn.goa-india.org 

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