GMR Airports eyes $500 mn fundraise
The proposed investment by AION will be a structured transaction with a mix of debt and equity
MUMBAI : GMR Airports Ltd is in talks to raise around $500 million from special situations fund AION Capital Management Ltd to buy out some of the investors in the country’s largest private airport operator, two people directly aware of the discussions said.
The proposed investment by AION, a joint venture between ICICI Bank Ltd and Apollo Global Management, will be a structured transaction with a mix of debt and equity, the people cited above said on condition of anonymity.
The funds will be used to buy out some of its private equity investors before a planned initial public offering later this year, the people said, adding that investors are likely to value the airport arm at about ₹25,000 crore.
“The transaction is at the final stage and is expected to close soon,” said one of the two people cited above.
The company’s investors include Macquarie SBI Infrastructure Investments, Standard Chartered PE, JM Financial-old Lane India Corporate Opportunities Fund, and Build India Capital Advisors LLP. They had collectively invested ₹1,500 crore since 2011.
GMR Airports is a unit of New Delhi-based GMR Infrastructure Ltd, which, apart from airports, has a presence in power and roadways. The group has decided to sharpen its focus on the airports business.
The presence of private equity investors on the company’s board has restricted the flow of funds from GMR Airports to GMR Infrastructure, according to a
credit rating report from Crisil. This is also demonstrated by the fact that GMR Airports has not declared a dividend for the past four years, and limited loans and advances to its parent for over the past three years, the report said.
On August 15, The Hindu Business Line reported that GMR Infra, together with its subsidiary GMR Airports, has signed definitive agreements with private equity investors, charting an exit route for them. These agreements are subject to regulatory approval. Spokespersons for both GMR group and AION declined requests for comment.
Mint had reported in November
that the GMR group was looking to raise ₹3,000-5,000 crore through a stake sale in GMR Airports. Currently, GMR Airports owns and operates airports in Delhi and Hyderabad and is developing projects in Goa, Greece and the Philippines.
“GMR Airports has a mature portfolio of assets compared to other operators in the market. A fundraise would also help them, as more airports may come into the market on development basis and so they would need capital to participate in those,” said Sanjay Sethi, managing partner and chief executive at Nestor Consulting, an infrastructure advisory firm. NEW DELHI: Us-based Simonelli Innovation Llc has sued Tata Consultancy Services Ltd (TCS) in a Texas court, alleging India’s largest information technology (IT) outsourcing firm wrongfully used its intellectual property (IP) and trade secrets to build its own consulting practice.
Simonelli, a privately-held consulting firm in Texas, accused TCS of misusing Simonelli’s trade secrets and confidential information and sought a jury trial, seeking compensation for loss in revenue on account of TCS using its consulting offering solutions.
“This case is being brought because TCS and TAIC (Tata America International Corp.) agreed to keep the IP and trade secrets of Simonelli Innovation confidential and to only use same in projects under the ‘Alliance Agreement’ that would mutually benefit both entities,” reads Simonelli’s lawsuit dated 15 August, filed in the western district of Texas.
Mint has reviewed a copy of the lawsuit.
“Despite this, the defendants (TCS) took the methodology and foundation given to them by plaintiff (Simonelli), and used it to transform their consulting options, obtain customers and increase revenue without including the plaintiff as required by the ‘Alliance Agreement’ contract between the parties”.
An email sent to TCS seeking comment went unanswered.
Simonelli’s lawsuit is the second IP infringement case faced by TCS in the past few years after a Us-based healthcare software company, Epic Systems Corp., took the Mumbai-based IT firm to court in 2016, alleging TCS took Epic’s proprietary software to build its own healthcare software product.