“There will be a shortfall compared to the revised disinvestment estimates. To make up for that, DIPAM (Department of Investment and Public Asset Management) will sell some Rs 8,000 crore worth of SUUTI stake,” said a top government official.
The Centre currently owns 4.71 per cent in Axis Bank and 7.93 per cent in ITC through SUUTI. As of Wednesday, the Axis stake was valued at Rs 8,221 crore and the ITC stake was valued at Rs 17,127 crore, taking the total to Rs 25,348 crore.
The Centre held a small stake through SUUTI in Larsen & Toubro as well (1.7 per cent), which it liquidated last year. For FY19, DIPAM was given a disinvestment target of Rs 80,000 crore. It surpassed that and raked in Rs 84,972 crore in the normal course of the year. However, the actual divestment receipts for 2018-19 now stand at Rs 94,727 crore, according to the FY21 Budget documents.
The official quoted above said that a part of this jump was because of a sale of Rs 7,000 crore through SUUTI. This is different from the 3 per cent stake it sold in Axis Bank through SUUTI earlier that year. It was in the latter transaction that the Centre’s stake in L&T was liquidated.
Without SUUTI, the Centre would have fallen well short of the FY20 Revised Estimates, as reported earlier.
This is because a number of offers-for-sale (OFSs) planned for March — including SAIL, NMDC, PFC, Coal India, IRCON, Hindustan Aeronautics, and others — have been postponed because of bearish market conditions.
The finance ministry is internally expecting around Rs 15,000 crore from NTPC’s acquisition of THDC and NEEPCO, and around Rs 5,000-7,000 crore from the planned IPO of IRFC and some buybacks.
So far, DIPAM has garnered a little over Rs 35,000 crore. The transactions mentioned above, excluding SUUTI, would take the disinvestment proceeds to around Rs 55,000-57,000 crore.
The target for the current fiscal was revised downwards to Rs 65,000 crore from Rs 1.05 trillion. In the 2020-21 Union Budget Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman also reduced the tax revenue and total expenditure estimates for FY20, and widened the fiscal deficit target to 3.8 per cent of gross domestic product, from 3.3 per cent.
DIPAM’s last transaction was the sale of 10 per cent of the Centre’s stake in RITES through OFS. The issuance bombed as the exchequer raised around Rs 400 crore, against expectations of garnering Rs 1,000 crore.
The Centre’s big divestment plans, including the privatisation of Air India, Bharat Petroleum, Container Corporation of India, and Shipping Corp of India, and the planned IPO of LIC, are all slated for the next fiscal year.
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