Adani Ports on a Roll with Three Big Acquisitions in Five Months
On
the prowl for more as promoters look to cash in on the stress situation
With three big acquisitions having a combined value of
₹14,659 crore in five months, Gautam Adani-led
Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Ltd (APSEZ) is on a roll.
On March 3, APSEZ acquired a 31.5% stake in Gangavaram Port Ltd (GPL) from a unit of private equity
firm Warburg Pincus LLC for ₹1,954 crore and
said it was in talks with D V S Raju and family, the promoters of the port
located in Visakhapatnam, for buying their 58.1% stake in GPL.
Gangavaram is APSEZ’s second big acquisition in Andhra Pradesh,
India’s second biggest maritime state by cargo volumes handled, after picking
up a 75% stake in Krishnapatnam Port Co Ltd (KPCL)
for an enterprise value of Rs12,000 crore on October
5.
On February 16, APSEZ said it has completed the
acquisition of Dighi Port Ltd, located close to
state-owned Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT), for ₹705 crore under
India’s bankruptcy law.
A consortium led by Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone
Ltd (APSEZ) will soon announce a deal to develop the West Container Terminal
(WCT) at Colombo Port with an investment of over $1 billion under a
government-to-government agreement.
The three Indian acquisitions expand APSEZ’s market share
to 30 per cent on a pan-India basis, a level many believe will not make it a
monopoly, adversely impacting competition. This is because the 12 major ports
owned by the Centre controls more than half of the country’s ports traffic.
Yet, many smaller, single terminal operators are
frightened at the scale at which APSEZ is expanding. “I told my promoter let us
pack up and leave”, said the CEO of a company operating a single berth at a
port on the eastern coast.
Takeover targets
Industry sources said that only Adani has the money and
the appetite to buy ports and terminals. “Because of its demonstrated
capability to run ports efficiently, banks are also comfortable in lending
money to APSEZ for acquisitions,” said an investment banker.
The stress facing many single terminal or stand-alone
single port operators, in the wake of the Covid, are
making them sitting targets for take over at reasonable valuations,
particularly reflected in the case of Krishnapatnam
and Gangavaram.
In 2010, Gautam Adani agreed to
buy D V S Raju’s stake in Gangavaram for
₹10,000 crore, said Ramesh Singhal, Director at
i-maritime Consultancy Pvt
Ltd.
“As part of some conditions, Adani asked D V S Raju to
give an indemnity for ₹100 crore on account of some liabilities that
might crop up after the deal. D V S Raju was not willing to give the indemnity
and the deal collapsed,” said a person aware of the development.
After ten years, Adani bought 31.5% stake from the
Warburg Pincus unit for ₹120 a share, valuing
(equity) Gangavaram port at ₹6,204 crore
instead of ₹10,000 crore in 2010 which would have been worth
₹30,000 crore today on 10% CAGR. So, in 2021, Adani is paying effectively
20% of what it was willing to pay in 2010 for the same asset, Singhal said.
On October 5 last year, APSEZ closed the deal to buy a 75
per cent stake in Krishnapatnam Port Co Ltd (KPCL) at
a 38.9 per cent reduction or ₹2,125 crore lower than the equity value
assessed when the deal was first announced in January 2020.
The equity portion of the Krishnapatnam
deal (excluding the debt held by the port operating company of about
₹6,212 crore) was valued in January at ₹7,360 crore of which 75 per
cent stake translated into ₹5,520 core.
But, the deal was closed in October at an enterprise
value of ₹12,000 crore. After factoring in the net liabilities including
debt of ₹7,500 crore, the total equity value was ₹4,500 crore and
APSEZ paid ₹3,395 crores for a 75 per cent stake, the company said.
APSEZ’s size and
capability
Despite the industry fears over the growing size of the
APSEZ empire, Singhal opines
that it could become “even bigger”. “Even today, APSEZ is under-estimated,”
“The port and logistics field are open to all, but others
Indian business houses could not make it because they did not have the
management capability and the vision to grow bigger. It is not Adani’s fault,”
he said referring to concerns that rivals have been left far behind.
For instance, the erstwhile UK port operator P&O
Ports (which was later acquired by D P World) approached the Tata Group for a
partnership when it was building India’s first private container terminal at
JNPT in the late 1990’s. “But Tatas declined the
offer and lost the opportunity to enter a sector which would have fetched high
value proposition to the Group and made it a big player,” the executive who
made the offer to Tatas said.
APSEZ’s model, according to Singhal,
is to offer integrated solutions to customers. “The game is not just ports, the
game is ports, hinterland transport and logistics parks to provide single
window supply chain solutions to industrial clients,” he said.
APSEZ is efficient, can raise huge capital and has
integrated into the entire logistics chain encompassing ports, container
trains, dry ports and multi-modal logistics parks, he said.
“If ports give X revenues, hinterland logistics could
give 3-4 times more revenue,” he noted. In contrast, the margin from port
business is as high as 70 per cent whereas in inland logistics, it could be
about 15per cent.
Once APSEZ has control over the hinterland cargo, Adani
would control large swathes of national supply chain which in turn would
augment Adani port volumes and port profit margins creating a value enhancing
virtuous circle. That’s the game plan,” he added.