Forbes India — November 17, 2017

(Ben Green) #1

Agarwal swooped in. He bought a 51
percent stake in Bharat Aluminium
Company (Balco) on the cheap in
2001 and orchestrated a turnaround.
So also with Hindustan Zinc.
At the time wholly owned by the
government, the company was in the
red and its zinc-lead mines spread
across Rajasthan were believed to
have reserves to last for only five years.
But Agarwal spotted an opportunity.
“He is a man of instinct. He goes
by his gut,” says HDFC Chairman
Deepak Parekh, who serves as an
independent non-executive director
on the board of Vedanta Resources.
Agarwal acquired a 65 percent
stake from the government in 2002
and infused fresh funds, expertise
and technology into the ailing
entity. This helped lower costs and
boost productivity, making the once
uneconomical company essential:
Today Hindustan Zinc meets more
than 80 percent of India’s demand
for zinc. It is the second largest zinc
producer in the world after Anglo-
Swiss mining giant Glencore and
its cost of production is among the
lowest in the world. It has reserves
to last another 25 years and is also
Vedanta’s most profitable unit. “If
I find things are in range, I never
take time to shoot,” says Agarwal
of his acquisition-led strategy.
But it’s not just undervalued
assets that he zeroes in on. Vedanta’s
purchase of a majority stake in


Cairn India, subsidiary of British
oil company Cairn Energy, for
more than $8 billion in 2011 was an
expensive one, says Agarwal. But it
was important as it marked Vedanta’s
entry into the oil and gas market.
Plus, with the merger of the cash-
rich energy business into Vedanta
Limited (formerly Sesa Sterlite)—the
debt-ridden Mumbai listed entity
that is 51 percent owned by Vedanta
Resources—earlier this year, Agarwal
not only streamlined the group’s
debt but also came closer to his
“dream” of creating an integrated
resource major out of India. “BHP is
from Australia, Rio Tinto from the
United Kingdom, Vale from Brazil.
India, too, must have its own natural
resources company,” he says.
In fact, some say Agarwal’s
purchase of a 12.4 percent stake in
Anglo American for $2.4 billion,
through his family trust Volcan
Investments in March this year, and
his upping it to 20 percent for another
$1.5 billion in September, is also aimed
at furthering that pursuit. Agarwal
insists that it’s a personal investment
but given the Johannesburg- and
London-based miner’s assets,
including its ownership of De Beers,
the world’s biggest diamond producer,
it seems unlikely that he will
remain a passive investor. Besides,
in the months since Agarwal’s first
investment, Anglo American, which
was among the hardest hit miners in

the commodity price slump of 2015
and 2016, reported healthy results and
even beat its debt reduction target.

B


ack in Agarwal’s seafront villa,
he launches into a spirited
monologue about India’s
potential. The country’s geology, he
says, is similar to that of mineral-
rich North America, Latin America,
Australia and South Africa. Yet we
produce only 20 percent of our
natural resource requirements.
More than a third of India’s
import bill—now at around $500
billion—is spent on petroleum
products. This is around 10 percent
of the GDP. Oil and gas aside, India
also purchases large quantities of
gold, silver, coal and fertilisers from
abroad. “Instead of extracting and
utilising our natural resources, we
are spending billions of dollars to
import them. We are eroding our
national income,” says Agarwal.
His purchase of Cairn India,
he points out, was with the view
of making India self-reliant. The
energy business currently meets
26 percent of India’s crude oil
requirement, which Agarwal aims to
increase to 50 percent over time. A
country that doesn’t produce 50-60
percent of its energy requirements
cannot survive, he contends.
In fact, Vedanta meets more
than 80 percent of India’s zinc
requirements, 95 percent of silver,

Vedanta Group structure


Vedanta ResouRces Plc

Vedanta limited

Zinc india BhaRat aluminium
(BALCO)

WesteRn clusteR
(LiBeriA)

Zinc
inteRnational

talWandi saBo
PoWeR

malco
PoWeR

a ustRalia
coPPeR mines

Kon Kola coPPeR mines 50.1%


64.9% 51% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%

79.4% soResa eiRon


aluminium (Odisha aluminium
and pOwer assets)

caiRn india
(Oil and gas)

steRlite coPPeR
(tuticOrin)

PoWeR (600 mw
Jharsuguda)

subsidiaries Of Vedanta limited

listed entities unlisted entities note: shareholding post cairn merger Source: Company data

V olcan inVestments

69.4%

sAM

ee

R^ pA

wAR

december 29, 2017 forbes india | 53
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