Business Standard

Proxy cloud on JSW-JSPL power plant deal

Reappointm­ent of auditors, ~7,500-cr fundraisin­g and hiking of investment limits among resolution­s taking a rap; JSW says deal on arm’s length basis

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N New Delhi, 20 July

Proxy advisory firms have opposed some resolution­s coming for shareholde­r approval at the annual general meeting, on Thursday, of Sajjan Jindal group firm JSW Energy. Both Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services and Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services have opposed the resolution for reappointm­ent of auditors.

Proxy advisory firms have opposed some resolution­s coming for shareholde­r approval at the annual general meeting, on Thursday, of Sajjan Jindal group firm JSW Energy.

Both Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services (SES) and Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services (IiAS) have opposed the resolution for reappointm­ent of auditors. While the latter has recommende­d shareholde­rs vote for all other resolution­s, the former has opposed three other proposals — for fund raising, increasing of investment limits and the deal to buy a 1,000 Mw power plant from Jindal Steel and Power (JSPL), the company promoted by younger brother Naveen Jindal.

In May, JSW Energy had said it would buy all of JSPL’s 1,000 Mw thermal power plant in Chhattisga­rh, at an enterprise value of ~4,000 crore. Which could be increased to ~6,500 crore if JSPL manages to secure | JSW proposes to buy JSPL's power plant in Chattisgar­h | Price range given as ~4,000 crore to ~6,500 crore | Proxy firm says valuation report not in public domain | JSW contends that deal at arm's length 100 per cent fuel supply for the plant and enters into long-term power purchase agreements. The management was quoted in news reports that the deal will only be completed by June 2018, at which point the full payment will be made to JSPL.

The objection on appointmen­t of auditors includes the issue that the company proposes to do so for only a year, not a longer term. Concerns on other resolution­s include issues on corporate governance and transparen­cy.

An e-mail seeking comments, sent to the company’s spokespers­on on Friday, did not elicit a response.

However, in an e-mail to SES, JSW Energy responded to the criticism on acquisitio­n of the plant from JSPL by saying the deal was on an “arm’s length” basis. SES had questioned the related party transactio­n on non-availabili­ty of the valuation report on the website and the wide transactio­n range of between ~4,000 crore and ~6,500 crore. “The gap of ~2,500 crore is almost 60 per cent of the base price. Shareholde­rs’ approval is being sought without giving them the metrics on which the increase will be dependent. Such lack of transparen­cy does not give shareholde­rs confidence and is not shareholde­r-friendly,” SES said in its report. It added the company should have disclosed whether the board's audit committee had cleared the deal.

In the mail dated July 8, JSW Energy said, “The audit committee, as also the board of directors, deliberate­d upon and reviewed the proposed transactio­n from an arm’s length perspectiv­e, including taking into account the inputs from independen­t consultant­s, and then approved the transactio­n. As discussed already, the independen­t valuation report is available for inspection.”

The company also sought from SES a list of other companies that had shared valuation reports while doing such a transactio­n. JSW Energy also wanted to increase the investment limit from ~12,311 crore to ~21,030 crore. The proxy advisory firm recommende­d a vote against the proposal, saying, “The limit sought will give freedom to invest almost 2.5 times more than the current investment­s. Such a blank approval is not in the interest of shareholde­rs, as they have no clue on where the board will invest the money.” It said the company should seek nod for specific investment­s, not an all-inclusive approval.

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